FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL BRONCO STADIUM | BOISE, IDAHO | 12.21.2013
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
TABLE OF CONTENTS Welcome from the Governor .................................4
San Diego State University ................................. 68
Welcome from the Mayor.......................................6
SDSU Aztecs Athletic Director ........................... 70
Welcome from Idaho Potato ..................................8
SDSU Aztecs Head Coach................................... 72
Welcome to Boise ................................................. 12
SDSU Aztecs Coaching Staff .............................. 74
Council Members .................................................. 18 Game Matchup ...................................................... 20 Mid-American Conference ................................. 30 The University at Buffalo ..................................... 34 UB Bulls Athletic Director ................................... 36 UB Bulls Head Coach ........................................... 38 UB Bulls Coaching Staff....................................... 40 Meet the UB Bulls ................................................. 42
Meet the Aztecs .................................................... 77 SDSU Aztecs Roster ............................................. 84 SDSU Aztecs Season in Review ........................ 86 Humanitarian Award Winners ............................ 94 Idaho Potato Bowl Historical Recap .............100 History of the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl...... 106 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Records............... 108
Kevin McDonald EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Danielle Brazil ASSISTANT MANAGER, EVENTS
Tamra Frisch EVENTS COORDINATOR
Michelle Smith MEDIA RELATIONS COORDINATOR
Mackenzie Cabot
UB Bulls Roster...................................................... 50
UB Bulls Stats ...................................................... 122
UB Bulls Season in Review ................................. 52
SDSU Aztecs Stats.............................................. 124
Depth Charts (both teams) .................................. 60
Bowl Staff ............................................................. 126
BAND AND CHEER COORDINATOR
Mountain West Conference................................ 62
Sponsors ............................................................... 128
Matt Snider
SPECIAL EVENT ASSISTANT
Aly Howell
MARKETING AND OPERATIONS ASSISTANT PUBLISHED BY
UNIVERSITY SPORTS PUBLICATIONS CO., INC. 570 Elmont Road Elmont, NY 11003 Tel: 516.327.9500 / Fax: 516.327.3099 www.uspsports.com
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Executive V.P. - Operations: Jeff Botwinick Executive V.P. - Business Development: Martin Lewis Executive V.P. - Sales: Steven Farkas Executive V.P. - Team Relations: David Gerschwer Executive Vice President: Julie Wong Production Manager: Nippa Esendal Production Assistant: Ashley Dethlefsen Designer: Jackie Kocsis Š2013 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission from the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl is expressly prohibited.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
WELCOME LETTER, C/L. “BUTCH” OTTER
Dear Friends, As Idaho’s governor and someone who once was a student and football player on this beautiful campus, I am proud to welcome you to Boise for the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. Our state and city, as well as Boise State University, are indeed honored to host this exciting and prestigious matchup between the San Diego State Aztecs of the Mountain West Conference and the University at Buffalo Bulls of the Mid-American Conference. Idaho is America’s largest potato-producing state – a distinction of which we’re justifiably proud. So naturally we are excited that this bowl game reflects the importance of our famous Idaho potatoes. It recognizes Idaho’s role in bringing the rest of the world heart-healthy, nourishing vegetables that can be used to produce more nutritious food and are grown more quickly, on less land, using less water, in harsher climates than any other major crop. While in Boise, I invite you to explore all that this part of Idaho has to offer. Ski at one of the world-class resorts located just an easy and beautiful drive from Boise, shop and eat in vibrant downtown Boise or take a walk along the lovely river that winds through our city. Boise has a thriving arts scene and is home to museums, the opera, ballet and theater. Most of all, have fun! We look forward to showing you the hospitality for which the state of Idaho and our people are famous. On behalf of the people of Idaho, good luck to both teams. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! As Always – Idaho, “Esto Perpetua”
IMAGE
C.L. “Butch” Otter Governor of Idaho
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
Noveember 26, 20 013 Fello ow Boiseans and guests: On behalf b of the “City of Treees,” I’m thrrilled to welccome you to the 2013 Faamous Idaho o Potatto Bowl. Boisee marks its 150 1 th anniverrsary as a citty this year, and the Fam mous Idaho P Potato Bowl is a wonderful w caapstone to th hat celebratioon. The natioon’s longest--running colld-weather bowll game is botth a great ath hletic contesst as well as shining tribuute to our staate’s iconic agriccultural symb bol. The gam me is also a ssignature eveent of Boise’s holiday seeason – a chance to bid farewell to the blue turf of Bronco Staddium, one off our commuunity’s g places, forr yet anotherr year. favorrite gathering Special greetingss go to all off you who m might be visitiing Boise foor the first tim me. Newccomers to ou ur city are im mpressed by our picture--postcard Fooothills; our sscenic Boisee Riverr Greenbelt; a downtown n bustling w with shops, reestaurants, annd cultural aactivities; and an a institution n of higher leearning, Boiise State Uniiversity, wheere academicc excellence is thee highest vallue. Most of all, visitors quickly com me to understtand Boiseanns’ passion for th his remarkab ble place – an nd feel that ppassion them mselves. My deepest d appreciation goees to the manny people whho have helpped to make the 2013 Famo ous Idaho Po otato Bowl a reality. Herre’s to a mem morable gam me and a greaat holiday seaso on. Sinceerely,
David H. Bieter Mayo or
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
WELCOME LETTER, FRANK W. MUIR
Dear Football and Potato Fans, On behalf of the Idaho Potato Commission (IPC), welcome to the Famous Idaho® Potato Bowl! This game marks our third year as title sponsor and we couldn’t be more pleased with the success the bowl has experienced. We have seen some exciting finishes between great teams. We anticipate another thrilling game today between San Diego State and University at Buffalo. We welcome the Aztecs and Bulls and their family and fans to Idaho and to Boise. One of the IPC’s primary responsibilities is to promote the potato that made Idaho famous and the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl is the perfect way for us to showcase two of Idaho’s most famous icons: Idaho potatoes and the blue turf at Bronco stadium! Additionally, this sponsorship allows us to show our support for college athletics and host a top-ranked bowl game that will be viewed by millions of football fans across the country. So enjoy the game and just make sure you always look for the “grown in Idaho” seal when preparing your favorite potato tailgating recipes! Best of luck to both teams! Sincerely,
Frank W. Muir President & CEO Idaho Potato Commission
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
FORK RESTAURANT
B
oise, Idaho’s Capital City, offers a rare blend of urban amenities and hometown comfort with interesting and unique sites and attractions, inviting outdoors, unlimited recreation, diverse cultural offerings and a familyfriendly atmosphere. Situated in Southwest Idaho at the foot of the scenic Boise Front, Boise is home to several Fortune 500 companies with national and international headquarters or divisions, sprawling high-tech campuses, Boise State University and other college satellite campuses and regional medical centers. Boise has a population of approximately 215,000, with nearly 600,000 in the metropolitan area.
Considered one of the nation’s most remote urban areas, Boise is 336 miles from Salt Lake City and 431 miles from Portland, its closest metropolitan neighbors. The high-desert climate and warmth of the Snake River valley translates to a mild winter -- low humidity, minimal rainfall and an average of only 12 inches of snow annually. Summer visitors enjoy the same low humidity and rainfall numbers with warmer temperatures. The long summer days, with daylight lasting until after 9:30pm, allow plenty of time for outdoor recreation. Whether a local or visitor, while in Boise for the game, plan to enjoy the city to its fullest. And make sure
to include Bogus Basin Mountain Recreation Area in your itinerary. Bogus Basin is located just 16 miles north of Boise’s city center. It is the perfect, affordable winter activity for all ages. Bogus offers 2,600 acres of skiable terrain including nordic skiing on 37 km of groomed trails with 3.8 km of solar-lit trails; day and night downhill skiing and snowboarding on 53 groomed runs with an 1,800 ft. vertical drop; three graduated-level terrain parks; and the Pepsi GoldRush Tubing Hill. There are three lodges on the mountain. Childcare, rentals and lessons are available. Visitors staying at Boise hotels may take advantage of a special Stay and Play “Buy One alpine or nordic ticket and Get One Free”
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promotion. Ask the front desk staff at your hotel for more information. While fun in the snow is quite popular, there are several “must see” attractions and activities in the Boise area. Stroll along the Basque Block on Grove Street between Capitol Blvd. and 6th Street - for colorful Basque culture. Visit the Basque Museum and Boarding House for an interpretation of Boise’s Basque heritage. Try some Basque food and drink at Bar Gernika or Leku Ona or shop for Basque food and wine specialties at the Basque Market. Just east of downtown is the Old Idaho Territorial Penitentiary, one of four territorial prisons still in existence in the U.S. The Old Pen housed many Wild West desperadoes in its time. Built in 1870, it closed in 1973 following prisoner riots over living conditions. The imposing sandstone compound includes a self-guided walking tour, transportation museum and the nation’s largest collections of historic arms and military memorabilia. The Old Pen is flanked by the Idaho Botanical Gardens which is lit for the holidays with over 250,000 sparkling lights. Be dazzled by the spectacular display of color and light in the Garden - artistically arranged and beautifully designed. Enjoy hot refreshments, cookies and toasty bonfires while you revel in the holiday atmosphere. Other outdoor interests located along the Boise River and connected by the Greenbelt include the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial near downtown and the M.K. Nature
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
Center. The Memorial is an example of what can happen when a community and an entire state come together for a cause. The first in the United States to honor Anne Frank, the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial offers a lesson on courage, strength, dignity of human spirit and the value of human rights for all men and women, and will have a lasting impact on those who visit. The M.K. Nature Center offers a one-of-a-kind fish and wildlife experience on a 4.6-acre site. The Nature Center’s outdoor nature walk and indoor visitor center provide a glimpse of Idaho’s many landscapes and abundant wildlife through handson exhibits. Underwater viewing windows along the stream walk give visitors a “fish-eye” view of the world. The Center is open from dawn to dusk and is a favorite among local and visiting families. Back indoors at the World Center for Birds of Prey, visitors can see rare falcons and eagles up close and the inner workings of an endangered species program. This unique center on the outskirts of Boise is the most sophisticated facility in the world for breeding and releasing birds of prey. Interactive exhibits, hands-on displays and live birds make this a wonderful attraction. There are many more interesting attractions in the area including the Idaho Black History Museum, Idaho Historical Museum, Boise Art Museum, Zoo Boise and the Discovery Center of Idaho – a hands-on science museum – all located in Julia Davis Park.
If shopping and dining are favorite pastimes, you are sure to find your fill. Downtown is jam-packed with boutiques, art galleries and restaurants. The downtown streets, BoDo, the Linen District and nearby Hyde Park are home to numerous shops and boutiques selling casual and formal attire, decorative housewares, outdoor apparel, antiques, imported goods and much more. Boise also offers a regional shopping mall, top brand retailers and an outlet mall with over 25 stores. More than 80 restaurants, coffee shops, brewpubs and cafes, many with cozy patios, line the streets of downtown, the perfect spot to relax or enjoy a meal with friends. Enjoy the nightlife? Many clubs and bars feature live bands and entertainment. For those wishing to experience scenic beauty and more winter recreation, drive three hours to the northeast to the resort town of Sun Valley – home of the nation’s first commercial ski resort. The quaint town of McCall on beautiful Payette Lake and near Brundage Mountain Ski Resort, and the place where many Boiseans go to get away, is about 2 hours north on Hwy. 55. For more information on Boise attractions, events, activities and accommodations or to request a Visitor Guide, visit www.boise.org or contact the Boise Convention & Visitors Bureau at (800) 635-5240. Statewide travel information is available through the Idaho Department of Commerce Tourism Division, www.visitidaho.org or (800) 847-4843.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
COUNCIL MEMBERS Curt Apsey, Boise State University
John Grizzaffi, Stein Distributing
Carl Arriola, PortaPros/ABC Sanitation
Ernie Hoidal, Attorney at Law
Gene Bleymeier, San Jose State University
John May, Group One Real Estate
John Brunelle, CCDC
Rob McCarvel, United Heritage
Jeff Brusby, Swire Coca Cola
Mac McReynolds, McReynolds Investment Grp.
Scott Butterfield, Lamar Advertising
Scott Mrachek, Food Services of America
Jeff Cilek, St. Luke’s
Kris Ormseth, Stoel Rives LLP
Doug Cole, J.R. Simplot Co.
Jeff Russell, Impact Sales, Inc.
Bill Cox, Experience Communications
Brandy Stemmler, Community Member
Tom Donahoe, Mitchell + Palmer
Duane Stueckle, Retired
Allen Dykman, Dykman Electrical Inc.
Jason Tomlinson, Tomlinson Designs
Ryan Eaton, United Rentals
Rich Urresti, McU Sports
Rich Fedrizzi, Retired
IMAGE
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
GAME MATCHUP
T
he 17th annual Famous Idaho Potato Bowl will kick off Saturday, Dec. 21 at Bronco Stadium in Boise, Idaho. Founded in 1997, the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl has featured six of the last nine games decided by the final drive. Last year, Utah State was victorious in its 41-15 win over Toledo. This year’s competition will feature one of the best defensive units in the nation and a team with a proven will-to-win. The longest-running outdoor
cold-weather bowl will welcome the University at Buffalo Bulls and the San Diego State Aztecs for the 2013 matchup. The University at Buffalo Bulls finished the season 8-4 and 6-2 in Mid-Atlantic Conference play. The Bulls were undefeated at home this season, beginning with a five-overtime thriller against Stony Brook in the home opener. UB rattled off seven-straight wins for the first time since 1897. The 2013 season marks the second time the
Bulls have been bowl eligible as an NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision program. The Bulls became eligible with prolific players on each side of the ball. Senior outside linebacker Khalil Mack has not only set school and conference records, but NCAA records as well. A few weeks ago Mack was named the 2013 Jack Lambert Award recipient, given annually to the top linebacker in collegiate football. After compiling 94 tackles, 10.5 sacks, 19 tackles for loss, three
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UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
interceptions and two touchdowns this season, Mack was named MAC Defensive Player of the Year and a Butkus Award Finalist. He was UB’s first Butkus Award Finalist and the second UB player to earn an invitation to the senior bowl. Along with his school and conference honors, Mack set two NCAA career records this season in tackles-for-loss (75) and forced fumbles (16). The Fort Pierce, Fla., native and two-star high school recruit earned first team all-conference MAC honors for the second consecutive season. On the other side of the ball, quarterback Joe Licata and running back Branden Oliver lead the team in offensive statistical categories. Licata averages 200 yards passing and has 21 touchdown passes under his belt. Oliver averages 130 rushing yards per game and has 15 touchdowns this season. Oliver, the Miami native, has 3,935 career rushing yards, a Bulls record. He needs 65 more yards to hit the 4,000 mark, and would be the 13th player in MAC history to reach the milestone. Head coach Jeff Quinn is in his fourth year at the helm of the Bulls’ program. Despite amassing a 9-27 record in his first three years, Quinn boasts eight wins this season and will look for his ninth against SDSU. The Bulls will look to stop the Mountain West Conference’s | 23 |
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
San Diego State, who is making their fourth-consecutive bowl appearance. The SDSU Aztecs, who are 7-5 and 6-2 in conference play, began their season with threestraight losses. In their second game of the season, the Aztecs travelled to Columbus, Ohio, to take on the Ohio State Buckeyes. The then no. 3/2 Ohio State Buckeyes scored six touchdowns in their first nine drives to win 42-7. SDSU returned home to face the Pac-12’s Oregon State. Despite holding the Beavers to 10 rushing yards for the game, Oregon State scored three times in the fourth quarter to come from behind and defeat SDSU 34-30. The Aztecs earned their first win against New Mexico State, 26-16, and notched wins in their next two games, before falling to then-No.15 Fresno State, 3528 in overtime. SDSU went on to win its next four games, including an overtime win on senior night against Boise State, before falling to UNLV 45-19 in the final game of the regular season. San Diego State tied a NCAA FBS record for four overtime games this season and won three of those contests. They tie 2004 Northwestern, 2008 Buffalo and 2012 Louisiana-Monroe. The Aztecs are the 19th school in the last 33 seasons to earn seven wins in a season after opening with three straight losses. SDSU won six of eight games with a seven or less point mar| 24 |
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
gin, and played seven-straight games decided by seven points or less. They recorded five come-from-behind victories this season, with two of those wins in overtime. Quarterback Quinn Kaehler amassed 2,796 yards passing this season, averaging 254 per game. He’s thrown for 17 touchdowns this season and completed 60.1 of his passes. Kaehler came in for the injured Adam Dingwell during the first quarter of the Ohio State game, and has conducted the Aztec offense ever since. Running back Adam Muema has rushed for 1,015 yards this season and leads the Aztecs with 12 touchdowns. The Covina, Calif., native has had a 100-yard rushing game in four of the past six contests. The Doak Walker Award candidate has 13 career
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
100-yard rushing games, which ties for fourth place in school history. Wide receiver and special teams star Tim Vizzi is second in the nation in punt returns for a touchdown, with two. The Nov. 25 MW Special Teams Player of
the Week was also named the national CFPA Punt Returner of the Week. Vizzi returned a punt for a 41-yard touchdown in SDSU’s 34-31 overtime victory over Boise State. His punt return for a touchdown was the first for an Aztec since 2002. Head coach Rocky Long is in his fifth season as a member of the San Diego State coaching staff and third as the head coach. As the first coach in SDSU history to lead the team to a bowl game in his first season, the Aztecs will make their fourth-consecutive bowl appearance this year. San Diego State’s offensive line will look to stop UB’s prolific pass rusher Khalil Mack. Like its predecessors, the 17th Famous Idaho Potato Bowl will be one to watch for all three phases of the game. Written by Jocelyn Perry
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2012 HEISMAN
Trophy Winner YEAR 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
NAME Jay Berwanger Larry Kelley Clint Frank Davey O’Brien Nile Kinnick Tom Harmon Bruce Smith Frank Sinkwich Angelo Bertelli Les Horvath Doc Blanchard Glenn Davis John Lujack Doak Walker Leon Hart Vic Janowicz Dick Kazmaier Billy Vessels John Lattner Alan Ameche Howard Cassady Paul Hornung John David Crow Pete Dawkins Billy Cannon Joe Bellino Ernie Davis Terry Baker Roger Staubach John Huarte Mike Garrett Steve Spurrier Gary Beban O.J. Simpson Steve Owens Jim Plunkett Pat Sullivan Johnny Rodgers John Cappelletti Archie Griffin Archie Griffin Tony Dorsett Earl Campbell Billy Sims Charles White George Rogers Marcus Allen Herschel Walker Mike Rozier Doug Flutie Bo Jackson Vinny Testaverde Tim Brown Barry Sanders Andre Ware Ty Detmer Desmond Howard Gino Torretta Charlie Ward Rashaan Salaam Eddie George Danny Wuerffel Charles Woodson Ricky Williams Ron Dayne Chris Weinke Eric Crouch Carson Palmer Jason White Matt Leinart Award Vacated Troy Smith Tim Tebow Sam Bradford Mark Ingram Cam Newton Robert Griffin III Johnny Manziel
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SCHOOL POSITION CLASS POINTS Chicago RB Sr. 84 Yale END Sr. 219 Yale QB Sr. 524 TCU QB Sr. 519 Iowa RB Sr. 651 Michigan RB Sr. 1,303 Minnesota RB Sr. 554 Georgia RB Sr. 1,059 Notre Dame QB Sr. 648 Ohio State QB Sr. 412 Army FB Jr. 860 Army RB Sr. 792 Notre Dame QB Sr. 742 SMU RB Jr. 778 Notre Dame E Sr. 995 Ohio State RB Jr. 633 Princeton RB Sr. 1,777 Oklahoma RB Sr. 525 Notre Dame RB Sr. 1,850 Wisconsin FB Sr. 1,068 Ohio State RB Sr. 2,219 Notre Dame QB Sr. 1,066 Texas A&M RB Sr. 1,183 Army RB Sr. 1,394 LSU RB Sr. 1,929 Navy RB Sr. 1,793 Syracuse RB Sr. 824 Oregon State QB Sr. 707 Navy QB Jr. 1,860 Notre Dame QB Sr. 1,026 USC RB Sr. 926 Florida QB Sr. 1,679 UCLA QB Sr. 1,968 USC RB Sr. 2,853 Oklahoma FB Sr. 1,488 Stanford QB Sr. 2,229 Auburn QB Sr. 1,597 Nebraska RB Sr. 1,310 Penn State RB Sr. 1,057 Ohio State RB Jr. 1,920 Ohio State RB Sr. 1,800 Pittsburgh RB Sr. 2,357 Texas RB Sr. 1,547 Oklahoma RB Jr. 827 USC RB Sr. 1,695 S. Carolina RB Sr. 1,128 USC RB Sr. 1,797 Georgia RB Jr. 1,926 Nebraska RB Sr. 1,801 BC QB Sr. 2,240 Auburn RB Sr. 1,509 Miami (Fla) QB Sr. 2,213 Notre Dame WR Sr. 1,442 Ok. State RB Jr. 1,878 Houston QB Jr. 1,073 BYU QB Jr. 1,482 Michigan WR Jr. 2,077 Miami (Fla) QB Sr. 1,400 Florida State QB Sr. 2,310 Colorado RB Jr. 1,743 Ohio State RB Sr. 1,460 Florida QB Sr. 1,363 Michigan CB Jr. 1,815 Texas RB Sr. 2,355 Wisconsin RB Sr. 2,042 Florida State QB Sr. 1,628 Nebraska QB Sr. 770 USC QB Sr. 1,328 Oklahoma QB Jr. 1,481 USC QB Jr. 1,325 Ohio State Florida Oklahoma Alabama Auburn Baylor Texas A&M
QB QB QB RB QB QB QB
Sr. So. So. So. Jr. Jr. Fr.
2,540 1,957 1,726 1,304 2,263 1,687 2,009
O
n December 8th, 2012, in New York City, Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel became the first freshman in college football history to take home the coveted Heisman Trophy. Manziel’s dynamic play helped propel Texas A&M to a 10-2 record and a berth in the Cotton Bowl, but it was the 19-year-old’s performance in an upset of then-No.1 Alabama in November that truly solidified his Heisman Trophy legitimacy. Manziel’s monster season included several huge games both through the air and on the ground as he became the first ever freshman, first SEC player and only fifth player in FBS history to throw for 3,000 yards and rush for 1,000 yards in the same season. Manziel broke 2010 Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton’s Southeastern Conference record for total offense with 4,600 yards. It was a magical ride for Manziel, who came out of spring practice as the back-up, but won the starting job in August just before the season kicked off. As the season progressed, Manziel started to put up numbers, but it was his performance on the road in Tuscaloosa against the Crimson Tide that brought “Johnny Football” national notoriety and put him on a clear path to Heisman history.
2012 HEISMAN TROPHY VOTING BREAKDOWN PLAYER
SCHOOL
1ST PLACE
TOTAL
JOHNNY MANZIEL
TEXAS A&M
474
2,009
MANTI TE’O
NOTRE DAME
321
1,706
COLLIN KLEIN
KANSAS STATE
60
894
JOHNNY MANZIEL’S 2012 SEASON STATISTICS PASSING COMP 273
ATTEMPTS 400
YARDS 3,419
RUSHING ATT 184
YDS 1,181
AVG 6.4
TOUCHDOWNS 24
TD 19
8/9/13 9:40 AM
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
DR. JON STEINBRECHER
Mid-American Conference Commissioner
roviding leadership in education and diversity, the Mid-American Conference moves into its 67th year of service to the student-athlete. Since its inception in 1946, the Mid-American Conference has progressively grown and developed into one of the most aggressive Division I conferences in the country. One of only ten football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) conferences, the MAC named Dr. Jon A. Steinbrecher as its eighth commissioner in March of 2009. The league has grown its commitment to championships by expanding to seven its number of neutral site post season events – football (Ford Field, Detroit), volleyball (SPIRE Academy, Geneva, Ohio), men’s and women’s basket-
P
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
ball (Quicken Loans Arena, Cleveland), softball (Firestone Stadium, Akron) and baseball (All Pro Freight Stadium, Avon, Ohio). In addition, the SPIRE facility will also serve as the site for the 2014 women’s swimming & diving championship and 2015 men’s swimming & diving championship. In 2013, the MAC had five programs receive bowl invitations: Bowling Green (Little Caesars Pizza Bowl), Northern Illinois (San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl), Ball State (GoDaddy Bowl), Buffalo (Famous Idaho Potato Bowl) and Ohio (Beef ‘O’ Brady’s Bowl St. Petersburg). The MAC had three teams with 10 wins or more (Northern Illinois 12-1; Ball State 10-2; Bowling Green 10-3) which tied for second among FBS conferences with the ACC, Big 12 and Pac 12 and only trailed the SEC (4). Northern Illinois quarterback Jordan Lynch was invited to the Heisman Trophy Award ceremony in New York City becoming only the third MAC student-athlete to receive an invitation to the ceremony – Marshall QB Chad Pennington (1999) and Marshall WR Randy Moss (1997). In 2012, the MAC witnessed a record setting seven teams receive a bowl invitation, includ-
ing the first ever BCS Bowl invitation with Northern Illinois playing in the Discover Orange Bowl on Jan. 1, 2013. The MAC also had four football programs ranked in the top 25 of national polls – Northern Illinois, Kent State, Toledo and Ohio—as the BCS Standings had two MAC programs in the Top 25 at the end of the regular season with No. 15 Northern Illinois and No. 25 Kent State. The MAC also set a conference record for the most wins against FBS opponents with 16 victories. The dramatic 2012 football season was capped as Central Michigan offensive tackle Eric Fisher was selected as the first overall selection by the Kansas City Chiefs in the 2013 NFL Draft, becoming the first football player from the MAC with such an honor. Earlier this year, the MAC announced the creation of newly created bowl games in Boca Raton, Fla., Nassau, Ba-
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Following another record-breaking season, the Mid-American Conference is excited to return to the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl for the fifth consecutive year - represented for the first time by the University at Buffalo Bulls
GENERATIONS OF CHAMPIONS SINCE 1946
www.MAC-SPORTS.com
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
received an invitation to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament and defeated Fairfield in the opening round. Akron center Zeke Marshall and Ohio point guard D.J. Cooper were selected to play in the 2013 Reese’s Division I College All-Star Game, as Cooper garnered MVP game honors. From two-time Super Bowl quarterback winning Ben Roethlisberger (Miami University), NFL Defensive MVP James Harrison (Kent State University), four NFL Pro Bowlers (OT Joe Staley, KR Josh Cribbs, TE Antonio Gates, LB James Harrison), British Open winner Ben Curtis (Kent State University), World Series winning manager Bob Brenly (Ohio University) and Olympic bobsled team member Brock Kreitzburgh (University of Toledo), the Mid-American Conference continues to excel in producing leaders in the world of athletics. hamas, Miami Beach, Fla., and Montgomery, Ala. for a six-year period (20142019). The creation of the Boca Raton, Bahamas and Miami Beach Bowls is the centerpiece of a joint agreement between several FBS conferences and will be supported by several FBS conferences on a six-year rotating basis. The Boca Raton Bowl will be owned and operated by ESPN and will be played at FAU Stadium, an open air stadium which seats nearly 30,000 fans on the campus of Florida Atlantic University. The Bahamas Bowl will be played at Thomas A. Robinson Stadium. The Miami Beach Bowl will be played at Marlins Park. The Camellia Bowl, based in Montgomery, Ala., is owned and operated by ESPN and will be played in the Cramton Bowl, a 25,000 seat stadium. The MAC is also a partner with the San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl as a primary partner in 2017 and 2019, and a secondary partner in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2018 bowl seasons. The MAC will play the Mountain West in both the 2017 and 2019 bowl seasons, played at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego. Starting in the 2014 season, the MAC will have a minimum five guaranteed
bowl opportunities. The MAC has longterm primary contracts with the GoDaddy Bowl (based in Mobile, Ala.) through the 2017 season and Famous Idaho Potato Bowl (based in Boise, Ida.) through the 2019 season. In its partnership with ESPN, the MAC is in the fifth year of its eight-year rights agreement (through 2016-2017 academic years) for football, as well as men’s and women’s basketball. The deal is the most extensive in the 67-year history of the conference. The agreement calls for a minimum of 25 events annually to be produced and aired on an ESPN platform including the men’s and women’s basketball championships, a regular-season MAC presence on ESPN, the Marathon MAC Football Championship Game and a minimum of 11 regular-season football games. In men’s basketball, the MAC witnessed Akron reach the FirstEnergy MAC Men’s Basketball Tournament for the seventh consecutive season, as the Zips won their third title in five years. Also, Ohio University earned an invitation to the NIT, while Western Michigan reached the College Basketball Invitational Final Four after wins over North Dakota State and Wyoming. Kent State
HISTORY OF THE MAC Based in Cleveland since July 1999 following a 15-year stay in Toledo, Ohio, the MAC has established historic measurements in both football and men’s and women’s basketball since moving to Northeast Ohio. The MAC was founded as a five-school league on February 24, 1946 in Columbus, Ohio with Ohio, Butler, Cincinnati, Wayne State and Western Reserve admitted as charter members. The Mid-American Conference has 12 full-time schools and a 13th, UMass for football only beginning in 2012. In 1946 men’s basketball was the first competitive sport in the MAC, which now sponsors a total 23 sports. Women’s sports were brought into the conference’s structure in 1980. For men, championships (11) are sponsored in football, basketball, baseball, cross country, soccer, swimming and diving, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, wrestling, golf and tennis. For women, championships (12) are sponsored in basketball, softball, volleyball, cross country, field hockey, golf, soccer, swimming and diving, gymnastics, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field and tennis.
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TM & Š2013 FX Networks, LLC. All rights reserved.
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO from the University at Buffalo’s UB 2020 vision, which is laying the foundation for ongoing collaborative efforts to address the complex societal problems facing our global community, in areas ranging from health and wellness to energy conservation to effective disaster responses.
SATISH K. TRIPATHI UB President
T
he first international-born president in UB’s history, Dr. Tripathi graduated at the top of his class from Banaras Hindu University in India. In addition to a doctorate in computer science from the University of Toronto, he holds three master’s degrees — one in computer science from the University of Toronto and two in statistics from the University of Alberta and Banaras Hindu University. Dr. Tripathi joined the University at Buffalo in 2004, serving as UB’s provost and executive vice president for academic affairs until his appointment as president in 2011. As Provost, Dr. Tripathi led the recruitment of many prominent faculty to the university and oversaw a significant increase in the number of faculty hired to develop and enhance strengths in key areas of research and scholarly activity. Under his leadership, the academic profile of UB’s undergraduate and graduate students also improved significantly. Dr. Tripathi was one of the principal creators of the UB 2020 long-range academic plan, and has led the university to achieve significant growth in research and scholarly activity, enhanced student quality and diversity, and an expanded international presence. Building on this strong foundation, Dr. Tripathi’s vision for UB’s future focuses on moving the university into the highest ranks of the nation’s leading research universities through expanding its reach and impact locally as well as globally. The University at Buffalo continues to experience a remarkable era of growth, progress, and innovation under Dr. Tripathi’s leadership. Since Dr. Tripathi assumed the presidency in 2011, the university has opened five major building projects on its three campuses, celebrated a $40 million bequest that is the largest gift in university history, and is moving forward with a long-anticipated plan to relocate its medical school downtown into a world-class new facility that will be the hub of a thriving life sciences community in Buffalo.
THE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO—CHANGING THE WORLD EVERY DAY The University at Buffalo is a premier, researchintensive public university dedicated to academic excellence. The largest and most comprehensive campus in the 64-campus State University of New York (SUNY) system, the University at Buffalo attracts topranking students and boasts a faculty that is nationally and internationally renowned. Founded as a downtown medical school in 1846, the university now occupies three campuses and offers more than 375 undergraduate, graduate and professional programs to roughly 30,000 students. The University at Buffalo was the first SUNY institution invited to join the prestigious Association of American Universities (AAU), an international organization of leading research universities devoted to maintaining a strong system of academic research and education. OUR RESEARCH CHANGES LIVES The University at Buffalo spends more than $350 million annually on research, seeking knowledge that leads to new cures, improved processes, stronger materials, faster computers, greener energy sources, smarter software, smaller machines and thousands of other improvements. Some of the many inventions to which our faculty have contributed include the cardiac pacemaker, the PSA test for prostate cancer and pattern recognition software. OUR FACULTY ARE LEADERS IN THEIR FIELDS Our faculty have been recognized as among the best teachers and top innovators in the world, winning such prestigious awards as the Nobel Prize, the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, the National Medal of Science, the National Medal of Technology, MacArthur Foundation Genius Grants and the Guggenheim Fellowship, among others. OUR STUDENTS ARE EMPOWERED TO BETTER THE WORLD University at Buffalo students enjoy an outstanding education at a university ranked among the best in the nation for affordability and value. A prime example of this emphasis on affordability is the university’s Finish in Four program, in which students pledge to graduate in four years and UB commits to providing them the resources they’ll need. From science and engineering to the arts, legal studies and business administration, university undergraduates choose from more than 100 exciting degree programs. The University at Buffalo also is a leading center for graduate and professional studies, with 205 master’s degrees and 94 doctoral and professional degrees. Both undergraduate and graduate students are benefiting
OUR STUDENTS ARE THE WORLD One of the strengths of the University at Buffalo is the diversity of our student body. We are first among the nation’s major public research universities in terms of percentage of international enrollment. And nearly 11 percent of UB students study abroad—that’s five times the national average—taking advantage of exchange programs with more than 75 universities around the world. While beyond our borders, our students have participated in everything from researching climate change in Greenland to performing street theater in Prague. WE PLAY HARD UB boasts 20 NCAA Division I athletic programs that compete in the Mid-American Conference, with the exception of women’s rowing, a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. The UB Bulls play some of the top football programs in the nation. Our rugby team has hosted the national championships and our women’s rowing team is a conference champion. OUR ALUMNI MAKE A DIFFERENCE Our more than 230,000 alumni live in every state and in 130 countries, contributing to solutions to today’s most pressing social problems and improving life for communities around the world. Some of our most famous alums include Harvey Weinstein, cofounder of Miramax films; Li Yanhong, cofounder of Baidu.com (China’s answer to Google); Wolf Blitzer, award-winning journalist for CNN; and Mickey Drexler, chairman and CEO of J. Crew Group. WE’RE INVESTING IN THE FUTURE OF HEALTH CARE INNOVATION True to our roots, the university is investing $375 million to build a new medical school that will advance research and education toward the treatment and eradication of disease, and enhance the longevity of our communities through the promotion of healthy lifestyles. The new School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, scheduled to open in 2016, will feature stateof-the-art laboratory space and an expanded patient care simulation center for clinical, surgical and robotic surgery training. WE ARE CREATING THE FUTURE OF HIGHER EDUCATION: UB 2020 Under the leadership of Satish K. Tripathi, our 15th president, the university’s vision for the future focuses on academic excellence—research and scholarly distinction, transformative student experiences and engaging public service. UB’s ambitious agenda translates to discoveries that transform lives. To achieve this vision, the university is collectively focused on three interconnected goals: advancing research and discovery that respond to critical issues shaping our 21st-century world; creating the environment that prepares students to be leaders in this world; and engaging even more effectively with our communities, locally as well as globally.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
DANNY WHITE UB Director of Athletics
D
Daniel J. “Danny” White was named University at Buffalo Director of Athletics by President Satish K. Tripathi on May 8, 2012. With an aggressive plan for the athletics program, White immediately laid the blueprint to capitalize on the unlimited potential of UB Athletics as the largest public institution in the state of New York and the flagship of the SUNY system. He has wasted little time putting his transformational plan in place, capitalizing on a vibrant student and alumni base that will craft his vision as the program is elevated to new heights. A rising star in intercollegiate athletics, the former Notre Dame Basketball player and New Orleans native has quickly ascended in the ranks of college athletics leadership. Since his arrival at The State University of New York at Buffalo, White has addressed coaching changes adding experience and depth through recent hires Felisha LegetteJack (women’s basketball), Sandy Calfo (rowing), Stu Riddle (men’s soccer), Bobby Hurley (men’s basketball), John Stutzman (wrestling) and Trena Peel (softball). Through a collective effort of athletics senior administration, coaches and staff, White recently introduced a comprehensive strategic plan that will outline a path for success in the coming years. Most no-
tably the vision to build America’s next big time college athletics brand. And only a year into his tenure, the plan has already begun to take shape. White is overseeing a number of capital projects that will create new as well as upgraded facilities on the Athletics blueprint. These include the recently dedicated $1 million Murchie Family Football Center and soon to break ground, a multi-million dollar state-of-the-art Ortman Tennis Center. Also in the works is a transformational capital project, the first in the 20-year history of UB Stadium to include a sport medicine center and the new East Club, which will provide fans with unparalleled fan amenities in UB Stadium. With the initiative to increase the fan base and enhance revenues, White also introduced a priority seating program for football with a new commitment to a vibrant fan experience on football game days. These moves included an upgraded Stampede Square fan interaction zone, corporate village tailgating area and a UB Football Tailgate Concert Series which will bring national recording artists to campus for pre-game concerts two hours before UB Football Saturday home games. White has also been active on the external front most notably initiating a new three-year radio broadcast partnership deal with CBS Sports Radio THE FAN 1270 AM. With an aggressive mission to expand coverage into the metropolitan New York area where a significant alumni base resides, White also introduced plans for Bulls radio broadcast deals with both WFAN and Bloomberg. White also engaged the services of global brand leader and Buffalo company New Era Cap to create an additional logo and branding platform that will further enhance the departments association and vast potential and connection to the State of New York. In one of his most interesting and exciting moves, White announced that UB will be playing its first ever football game at Ralph Wilson Stadium – home of the NFL’s Buffalo Bills. Known as the Clash at the Ralph, the Bulls’ game against Bowling Green will be the first college football game played at the stadium since 1979. Prior to Buffalo, White served as senior associate athletics director at the Universi-
ty of Mississippi from 2009-12. From 200709, White was associate athletics director for development at California State University-Fresno. He was assistant athletics director for development at Northern Illinois University from 2006-07. White began his career in athletic administration as a development associate for the UMAA Foundation at Mississippi in 2005. A collegiate basketball player at Towson University and the University of Notre Dame, White was director of basketball operations for men’s basketball at Ohio University for the 2003-04 season before being promoted to assistant men’s basketball coach for the 2004-05 campaign. White is a 2002 graduate of Notre Dame with a bachelor’s degree in business administration. He earned master’s degrees in both business administration and sports administration from Ohio University. He is working to complete a doctorate in higher education from Mississippi. White comes from a family deeply involved in intercollegiate athletics. His father, Kevin, is director of athletics at Duke. His brother, Michael, is the head men’s basketball coach and his brother, Brian, is the associate athletics director at Louisiana Tech. He and his wife, Shawn, have four children: Aidan, Molly, Caitlin and James.
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No matter the competition, having a deep bench is a necessity in any game. With 100 innovative companies, PowerShares QQQ provides investors access to some of the most competitive teams in their industry. So whether you’re on the sidelines or just taking a timeout, consider joining the game with innovative investing. Leave the coaching to us. PowerShares QQQ is based on the Nasdaq-100 Index®. The Fund will, under most circumstances, consist of all stocks in the Index. The Index includes 100 of the largest domestic and international nonfinancial companies listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market based on market capitalization. There are risks involved with investing in Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) including possible loss of money. The funds are not actively managed and are subject to risks similar to stocks, including those related to short selling and margin maintenance. Ordinary brokerage commissions apply. Shares are not FDIC insured, may lose value and have no bank guarantee. Shares are not individually redeemable and owners of the shares may acquire those shares from the Funds and tender those shares for redemption to the funds in Creation Unit aggregations only, typically consisting of 50,000 shares.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
UB HEAD COACH
JEFF QUINN UB Head Coach
H
ead coach Jeff Quinn continues to mold the Buffalo football program into his vision since being hired on Dec. 22, 2009. Quinn led the Bulls to an 8-4 record in 2013. The eight wins were the most in the regular season since the Bulls made the move to the FBS in 1999. The Bulls also won a school-record six Mid-American Conference games. The fourth-year head coach has led UB to just its second ever bowl game - the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. Quinn has aided in the develpment of standout linebacker Khalil Mack, who was named the MAC Defensive Player of the Year as well as earned the Jack Lambert Award - given to the nation’s top linebacker. The Bulls went 4-8 (3-5 MAC) in 2012, but it was the way UB ended the season that got fans excited. Buffalo won three of its last four games. The Bulls posted their best numbers in nearly every statistical category since Quinn’s arrival. UB rushed for 2,120 yards the third highest total in school history and the most as a Division I-A program. On the other side of the ball, the Bulls ranked second in the MAC in total defense. Quinn led the Bulls to a 3-9 record (2-6 MAC) in 2011 with some record-breaking performances. Running back Branden Oliver set the single-season rushing record with 1,395 yards. He coached a pair of first-team All-MAC selections in Oliver and linebacker Khalil Mack. The Bulls became more comfortable with Quinn’s system in year two and the numbers reflected it. UB averaged eight more points and 68 more yards of total offense per game than in 2010. Buffalo had 13 plays of 40 or more yards in 2011 - the most in its Division I era.
In 2010, the Bulls finished 2-10 in his first season, with a 1-7 mark in MAC play. Despite the record, the Bulls boasted one of their best defenses in their Division I history in 2010 as efensive backs Davonte Shannon and Domonic Cook earned All- MAC First Team honors, while linebacker Khalil Mack was named to Phil Steele’s 2010 Postseason All-Freshman Team. Quinn was introduced as the 24th head coach in the history of the University at Buffalo football program by former Director of Athletics Warde Manuel on Dec. 22. Quinn has produced record-breaking offenses throughout his 27-year college coaching tenure and has won conference and national championships at his last three stops, including five conference crowns in the past eight seasons. As offensive coordinator and offensive line coach at Cincinnati for the past three seasons, Quinn has helped the Bearcats compile a 33-6 record, including a 12-0 record in 2009 and a national No. 4 ranking heading into the Sugar Bowl meeting with defending national champion Florida. Quinn was named one of five finalists for the 2009 Broyles Award, which is given to the nation’s top assistant coach. Unranked in preseason polls, Cincinnati’s undefeated regular season catapulted the Bearcats to No. 3 in the BCS standings and earned them an invitation to the Allstate Sugar Bowl, the school’s second consecutive BCS game. UC set numerous school records in 2009, including those for wins (12), road wins (6), consecutive regular season wins (18), points (495), passing yards (3,844), fewest fumbles (10) and fewest turnovers (10). Behind Quinn’s offensive line, the Bearcats have had an individual top the 100yard plateau in six of the last eight games and eight out of 12 games overall. UC has topped 200-yards rushing on three occasions and has set the school record for points and touchdowns. Offensive tackle Jeff Linkenbach was a midseason selection to the SI.com all-America squad. UC leads the nation in passing efficiency (166.19) despite using five different quarterbacks through the course of the season. The Bearcats rank sixth in passing offense (320.3), scoring offense (39.8), and total offense (464.3) and 10th in sacks allowed (0.9) behind Quinn’s coordination of the offense. Eleven UC student-athletes were honored as all- BIG EAST selections, including four out of Quinn’s five starting offensive linemen. Chris Jurek (1st), Alex Hoffman (2nd), Jason Kelce (2nd), and Linkenbach (2nd) earned all-BIG EAST honors in 2009. No stranger to the Mid-American Conference and its recruiting footprint, Quinn served
as associate head coach and offensive coordinator at Central Michigan prior to his stint at Cincinnati and helped lead the Chippewas to the 2006 MAC title. He served as interim head coach for Central Michigan’s 31-14 victory over Middle Tennessee in the 2006 Motor City Bowl prior to joining the UC staff. He arrived at CMU in 2004 after 15 seasons at Grand Valley State. He was part of the staff that led the Lakers to back-to-back national championships in 2002 and 2003. The 2001 Laker offense averaged 600.8 yards and set an NCAA record by averaging 58.4 points per game. During his career, Quinn has coached 12 offensive linemen who have played in the professional ranks, including first, fourth, fifth, and seventh round NFL Draft choices, as well as 22 players who have earned All-America status. In 2008, Quinn mentored Offensive guard Trevor Canfield, who was an Associated Press Second-Team All- America selection, the first UC offensive lineman to earn a spot on the AP team since Bill Shalosky in 1952. He is a 1984 graduate of Elmhurst College where he was a two-sport standout in football and wrestling. Quinn was twice named Student-Athlete of the Year at Elmhurst. He was inducted into Elmhurst’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 1993. Quinn earned a master of arts degree from De- Pauw in 1986 and an educational leadership master’s degree endorsement from GVSU in 2000. He and his wife Shannon have two sons, Kyle and Ryan. Kyle serves as the undergraduate student representative to the UC Board of Trustees. He was also awarded the Boren Scholarship as is studying in Brazil for the 2012-13 academic year. Ryan is a wrestler at Central Michigan.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
UB COACHES AND SUPPORT STAFF
Jeff Quinn Head Coach
Alex Wood Offensive Coordinator/ Wide Receivers
Lou Tepper Defensive Coordinator/ Linebackers
Jappy Oliver Assistant Head Coach
Don Patterson Quarterbacks/ Recruiting Coordinator
Adam Shorter Offensive Line/Run Game Coordinator
Marty Spieler Tight Ends/ Co-Special Teams
Mike Dietzel Safeties/Co-Special Teams Coordinator
Matt Simon Running Backs
Maurice Linguist Secondary
Paul Bittar Director of Football Operations
Jordan Brown Graduate Assistant
Zach Duval Strength and Conditioning
Holman Copeland Graduate Assistant
Greg Meyer Graduate Assistant
Keegan Jones Graduate Assistant
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LVO13602_NCAA One-Page Ad_110113.indd 1
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO BULLS
83 Natey Adjei WR • Sr. • 6-0
3 Okezie Alozie DB • So. 6-0
95 Beau Bachtelle DL • Sr. • 6-5
73 Jessie Back OL • So. • 6-4
5 Marqus Baker DB • So. • 5-10
93 Dalton Barksdale DL • Jr. • 6-3
33 Blake Bean LB • Jr. • 6-1
20 Tomarris Bell DB • Sr. • 5-11
23 Brandon Berry DB • R-Fr. • 6-0
74 Robert Blodgett OL • So. • 6-5
63 Andrew Borruso OL • R-Fr. • 6-1
34 Patrick Brennan RB • Sr. • 5-8
15 Derek Brim DB • Sr. • 6-0
41 Boomer Brock FB • Sr. • 5-10
64 Jason Bunk OL • R-Fr. • 6-2
37 Colton Caldwell TE • Jr. • 6-4
21 Devin Campbell RB • So. • 5-11
56 Jasen Carlson OL • Sr. • 6-2
19 James Chambers DB • Fr. • 6-0
45 Patrick Clarke K • Jr. • 6-2
30 James Coleman RB • Fr. • 6-1
78 Dan Collura OL • R-Fr. • 6-6
55 Brandon Crawford LB • Fr. • 6-2 | 42 |
17 Andrews Dadeboe DB • Fr. • 6-1
5 Tony Daniel QB • So. • 6-5
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Spark Communications.indd 1
10/8/13 3:52 PM
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO BULLS
50 Andre Davis OL • Jr. • 6-4
96 Xavier Davis DL • Fr. • 6-2
68 Khari Demos OL • Fr. • 6-3
17 Alex Dennison TE • Sr. • 6-1
12 Cordero Dixon WR • Jr. • 5-11
25 John Dunmore WR • Jr. • 6-0
84 Jamarl Eiland WR • Fr. • 5-10
48 Waylon Fink LB • R-Fr. • 6-5
58 Chris Ford DL • Fr. • 6-2
36 Jarrett Franklin LB • Fr. • 6-0
43 Nick Gilbo LB • R-So. • 6-1
8 Houston Glass DB • Fr. • 6-0
81 Jimmy Gordon TE • Sr. • 6-5
27 Corbin Grassman LS • Fr. • 6-2
11 Tyler Grassman P • So. • 6-1
65 Dillon Guy OL • Jr. • 6-4
82 Ed Harof TE • Sr. • 6-0
91 Demone Harris DE • Fr. • 6-4
30 Okoye Houston DB • Sr. • 6-0
13 Devon Hughes WR • Jr. • 6-0
41 Solomon Jackson LB • Fr. • 6-1
2 Jordan Johnson RB • R-Fr. • 6-0
22 Najja Johnson DB • Sr. • 6-0
70 John Kling OL • So. • 6-7
31 Carlos Lammons DB • Sr. • 5-8
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UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO BULLS
18 Fred Lee WR • Sr. • 6-2
4 Cortney Lester DB • Jr. • 6-0
16 Joe Licata QB • So. • 6-2
39 Greg Lis LB • Fr. • 6-0
92 Tedroy Lynch DE Jr. • 6-2
46 Khalil Mack LB • Sr. • 6-3
61 Brandon Manosalvas OL • Fr. • 6-4
88 Jacob Martinez WR • Fr. • 6-2
75 Albert McCoy OL • R-Fr. • 6-4
7 Marcus McGill WR • So. • 6-1
6 Collin Michael QB • R-Fr. • 6-5
44 Glynn Molinich TE • Fr. • 5-11
26 Brandon Murie RB • Sr. • 5-9
19 Alex Neutz WR • Sr. • 6-3
59 Tyler O’Henly OL • Fr. • 6-6
32 Branden Oliver RB • Sr. • 5-8
87 Brian Orzechowski P R-Jr. • 6-4
31 Kendall Patterson FB • So. • 6-0
42 Ryan Paxson LB • Jr. • 6-6
66 Max Perisse DL • R-Fr. • 6-4
60 Jake Pickett OL • So. • 6-0
52 Travis Pitzonka LB • So. • 6-1
1 James Potts RB • Jr. • 5-11
29 Adam Redden DB • Jr. • 6-1
35 William Rembert DB • R-Fr. • 6-0
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UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO BULLS
47 Kendall Roberson LB • Jr. • 6-2
80 Malcolm Robinson WR • R-Fr. • 6-1
87 Boise Ross WR • Fr. • 6-0
71 Trevor Sales OL • Jr. • 6-2
40 Joe Schillace RB • Fr. • 6-1
85 Mason Schreck TE • R-Fr. • 6-5
11 Jordan Shay WR • So. • 5-11
10 Witney Sherry DB • Jr. • 6-0
67 Jake Silas OL • Jr. • 6-7
24 Lee Skinner LB • Jr. • 6-2
9 Craig Slowik QB • Fr. • 6-4
97 Zach Smekal DL • Fr. • 6-3
90 Kristjan Sokoli DL • Jr. • 6-5
38 C.J. Stancil DB • R-Fr. • 5-11
9 Jake Stockman LB • Jr. • 6-2
28 Dwellie Striggles DB • Jr. • 5-10
49 Keith Takeh DB • Jr. • 5-9
51 Brandon Tammaro LB • So. • 6-3
14 Anthone Taylor RB • So. • 5-10
52 Todd Therrien OL • So. • 6-1
34 Colby Way DL • Sr. • 6-4
72 Lance Weaver DL • Sr. • 6-3
89 Matt Weiser TE • So. • 6-5
22 Diamond Williams RB • Fr. • 5-11
86 Ron Willoughby WR • So. • 6-4
15 Alex Zordich QB • Sr. • 6-3
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
2013 UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO FOOTBALL ROSTER No. Name 83 Natey Adjei
Pos. Cl. WR Sr.
Ht. 6-0
Wt. 196
3 95
Okezie Alozie Beau Bachtelle
DB DL
So. Sr.
6-0 6-5
208 273
73 5 93 33
Jessie Back Marqus Baker Dalton Barksdale Blake Bean
OL DB DL LB
So. So. Jr. Jr.
6-4 5-10 6-3 6-1
294 181 304 232
20 23 74
Tomarris Bell Brandon Berry Robert Blodgett
DB DB OL
Sr. R-Fr. So.
5-11 6-0 6-5
206 205 307
63 34
Andrew Borruso Patrick Brennan
OL RB
R-Fr. Sr.
6-1 5-8
285 198
15 41 64 37
Derek Brim Boomer Brock Jason Bunk Colton Caldwell
DB FB OL TE
Sr. Sr. R-Fr. Jr.
6-0 5-10 6-2 6-4
199 260 281 240
21 56
Devin Campbell Jasen Carlson
RB OL
So. Sr.
5-11 6-2
205 326
19 45
James Chambers Patrick Clarke
DB K
Fr. Jr.
6-0 6-2
190 193
30
James Coleman
RB
Fr.
6-1
232
78
Dan Collura
OL
R-Fr.
6-6
286
55
Brandon Crawford
LB
Fr.
6-2
229
17 5 50
Andrews Dadeboe Tony Daniel Andre Davis
DB QB OL
Fr. So. Jr.
6-1 6-5 6-4
187 206 320
96
Xavier Davis
DL
Fr.
6-2
322
68 17 12
Khari Demos Alex Dennison Cordero Dixon
OL Fr. TE Sr. WR Jr.
6-3 6-1 5-11
250 242 180
25
John Dunmore
WR Jr.
6-0
178
84 48
Jamarl Eiland Waylon Fink
WR Fr. LB R-Fr.
5-10 6-5
190 234
58 36
Chris Ford Jarrett Franklin
DL LB
Fr. Fr.
6-2 6-0
323 200
43
Nick Gilbo
LB
R-So. 6-1
220
8
Houston Glass
DB
Fr.
6-0
188
81
Jimmy Gordon
TE
Sr.
6-5
255
27
Corbin Grassman
LS
Fr.
6-2
223
11
Tyler Grassman
P
So.
6-1
195
65
Dillon Guy
OL
Jr.
6-4
320
82 91
Ed Harof Demone Harris
TE DE
Sr. Fr.
6-0 6-4
219 250
30 13 41
Okoye Houston Devon Hughes Solomon Jackson
DB Sr. WR Jr. LB Fr.
6-0 6-0 6-1
209 188 230
Hometown/High School Mississauga, Ontario/St. Joseph’s Secondary Bethlehem, PA/Freedom Tuolumne, CA/ Summerville/Modesto JC Cincinnati, OH/La Salle Tampa, FL/Robinson Detroit, MI/Cass Technical Wichita, KS/Mt. Carmel Catholic/Butler CC Rochester, NY/McQuaid Detroit, MI/Cass Technical Lima, NY/Honeoye Falls-Lima Oceanside, NY/Oceanside Staten Island, NY/ St. Joseph by the Sea Buffalo, NY/Canisius Elma, NY/Iroquois Alden, NY/Alden Dublin, OH/Dublin Coffman/Alfred State Youngstown, OH/Boardman Jamestown, NY/ Southwestern Lockport, NY/Lockport New Castle, DE/ Hargrave Military Academy Queens Village, NY/ Christ the King Eklridge, MD/ Dematha Catholic Madison, FL/ Madison County York, PA/Central York Hiram, GA/South Paulding Cheektowaga, NY/ Maryvale Atlanta, GA/The New Schools at Carver Lockport, NY/Lockport Irwin, PA/Norwin Suwanee, GA/ North Gwinnett Syracuse, NY/Christian Brothers Academy Canton, MI/Plymouth Greensburg, PA/ Greensburg Salem Medina, OH/Medina St. Charles, MO/ Francis Howell Port Henry, NY/Moriah Central/Hudson Valley CC Kentwood, MI/ East Kentwood Patchogue, NY/ Patchogue-Medford Alexander, OH/ Johnstown-Monroe Columbus, OH/ Gahanna Lincoln Hamilton, Ontario/ Waterdown District Williamsville, NY/Clarence Buffalo, NY/ Bishop Timon-St. Jude Greenville, SC/Woodmont Tyrone, GA/Sandy Creek Stone Mountain, GA/Tucker
No. 2 22 70 31 18 4 16
Name Jordan Johnson Najja Johnson John Kling Carlos Lammons Fred Lee Cortney Lester Joe Licata
Pos. RB DB OL DB WR DB QB
Cl. R-Fr. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. Jr. So.
Ht. 6-0 6-0 6-7 5-8 6-2 6-0 6-2
Wt. 233 187 305 175 205 182 226
39
Greg Lis
LB
Fr.
6-0
219
92
Tedroy Lynch
DE
Jr.
6-2
249
46 61 88 75 7 6 44 26 19 59 32 87 31
Khalil Mack Brandon Manosalvas Jacob Martinez Albert McCoy Marcus McGill Collin Michael Glynn Molinich Brandon Murie Alex Neutz Tyler O’Henly Branden Oliver Brian Orzechowski Kendall Patterson
LB OL WR OL WR QB TE RB WR OL RB P FB
Sr. Fr. Fr. R-Fr. So. R-Fr. Fr. Sr. Sr. Fr. Sr. R-Jr. So.
6-3 6-4 6-2 6-4 6-1 6-5 5-11 5-9 6-3 6-6 5-8 6-4 6-0
248 307 182 277 227 224 232 192 205 290 208 216 260
42 66
Ryan Paxson Max Perisse
LB DL
Jr. R-Fr.
6-6 6-4
227 266
60
Jake Pickett
OL
So.
6-0
289
52
Travis Pitzonka
LB
So.
6-1
217
1
James Potts
RB
Jr.
5-11
194
29 35 47 80 87 71
Adam Redden William Rembert Kendall Roberson Malcolm Robinson Boise Ross Trevor Sales
DB DB LB WR WR OL
Jr. R-Fr. Jr. R-Fr. Fr. Jr.
6-1 6-0 6-2 6-1 6-0 6-2
202 195 232 199 173 327
40 85 11 10 67 24 9 97 90 38 9 28
Joe Schillace Mason Schreck Jordan Shay Witney Sherry Jake Silas Lee Skinner Craig Slowik Zach Smekal Kristjan Sokoli C.J. Stancil Jake Stockman Dwellie Striggles
RB TE WR DB OL LB QB DL DL DB LB DB
Fr. R-Fr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. R-Fr. Jr. Jr.
6-1 6-5 5-11 6-0 6-7 6-2 6-4 6-3 6-5 5-11 6-2 5-10
245 229 187 188 310 233 185 261 300 200 237 185
49
Keith Takeh
DB
Jr.
5-9
187
51
Brandon Tammaro
LB
So.
6-3
222
14 52
Anthone Taylor Todd Therrien
RB OL
So. So.
5-10 6-1
209 291
34
Colby Way
DL
Sr.
6-4
293
72
Lance Weaver
DL
Sr.
6-3
285
89 22 86 15
Matt Weiser Diamond Williams Ron Willoughby Alex Zordich
TE RB WR QB
So. Fr. So. Sr.
6-5 5-11 6-4 6-3
241 197 196 227
Hometown/High School Amherst, NY/Sweet Home Atlanta, GA/Marietta Cheektowaga, NY/Depew Pahokee, FL/Pahokee Chester, SC/Chester Miramar, FL/Everglades Williamsville, NY/ Williamsville South Lincoln Park, NJ/ DePaul Catholic Shiremanstown, PA/ Mechanicsburg/Lackawanna JC Fort Pierce, FL/Westwood Paramus, NJ/Paramus South Port, FL/Bozeman St. Petersburg, FL/Gibbs Rochester, NY/Gates Chili Lexington, OH/Lexington Pittsford, NY/Pittsford Mendon Elma, NY/Iroquois Grand Island, NY/Grand Island London, Ontario/Mother Teresa Miami, FL/Miami Southridge Lockport, NY/Lockport Abingdon, MD/ DeMatha Catholic Brighton, MI/Brighton/Cincinnati Dowingtown, PA/ Reed Henderson Owego, NY/ Owego Free Academy Lancaster, NY/Lancaster/ Milford Academy Boynton Beach, FL/ American Heritage Amherst, NY/St. Francis Southfield, MI/Cass Technical Decatur, GA/Avondale Canton, OH/Canton McKinley Bethlehem, PA/Liberty La Porte, IN/La Porte/ Delaware State Auburn, NY/Auburn Medina, OH/Medina Elmira, NY/Elmira Southside Miami, FL/Chaminade-Madonna Portland, MI/Portland Dayton, OH/Fairborn Joliet, IL/Joliet Catholic Medford, NJ/Shawnee Bloomfield, NJ/Bloomfield Chesterfield, VA/Cosby Joliet, IL/Joliet Catholic Lauderhill, FL/ University School Hollywood, FL/ Chaminade-Madonna Plymouth, MI/ Detroit Central Catholic Huber Heights, OH/Wayne Williamsville, NY/ Williamsville East State College, PA/ State College Adams Center, NY/ South Jefferson/Jefferson CC Womelsdorf, PA/Conrad Weiser Watertown, NY/Watertown Avon Lake, OH/Avon Lake Youngstown, OH/ Cardinal Mooney
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
B
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
BULLS FOOTBALL RECAP
UFFALO, NY – The University at Buffalo football team has had a record-breaking season on and off the field in 2013. The Bulls finished the regular season 8-4 and earned an invitation to the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, just their second bowl appearance in school history. Fans came out in record numbers as the 136,418 paid attendance in 2013 shattered the previous mark of 108,118 set in 2011. This year, the Bulls averaged 22,736 fans per game, with five games over the 20,000 mark. To put that in perspective,
UB had a total of five games of 20,000 or more fans over the previous six seasons, combined. One of UB Athletic Director Danny White’s goals when taking the job last year was to create a vibrant tailgate atmosphere at UB Stadium. His vision resulted in Stampede Square, a familyfriendly entertainment area that included food, games and activities for all ages. Stampede Square was also the home of the Tailgate Concert Series, which was a very popular addition to the game day festivities. Each week, awardwinning national music acts took
the stage to perform. Bands such as Kool and the Gang, Blues Traveler and Randy Houser rocked Stamped Square in the hours leading up to kick off. Once inside the stadium, fans were treated to one of the most entertaining seasons of football in school history. The Bulls won eight regular season games, the most as an FBS program. Starting
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Own all of your favorite moments from all your favorite seasons. Award-winning HBO and Cinemax Original Series, now available on Blu-ray , DVD and Digital Download. 速
速
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息 2013 Home Box Office, Inc. All rights reserved. HBO速 and related service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc.
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
BULLS FOOTBALL RECAP
with a thrilling five-overtime victory against Stony Brook in the home opener, UB rattled off seven straight wins, a feat last accomplished way back in 1897. In addition, Buffalo won all five games played at UB Stadium. UB has had standout players and performances at nearly
every position on the field. Offensively, running back Branden Oliver has shattered James Starks’ school record with 3,935 career rushing yards. He has saved his finest season for his senior campaign as he broke his own single-season school record with 1,421 yards and has scored 15 touchdowns in 2013. Oliver is 65 yards shy of becoming just the 13th player in Mid-American Conference history to rush for 4,000 yards. Another senior standout on offense is Alex Neutz. The Grand Island native broke the school
record for career receiving touchdowns with 30 and currently ranks third in school history in career receptions (191) and career receiving yardage (3,017). Neutz is the first UB player with 10 or more touchdown receptions in two different seasons. The emergence of sophomore quarterback Joe Licata played a large part in the gaudy numbers put up by the offense. Licata has thrown 20 touchdowns in 2013, the second most for a single season in school history. His 220 completions and 2,628 passing yards, both rank fourth in UB
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Superbowl_ finalad_Layout 1 12/9/13 5:01 PM Page 1
The Reigning Champs of Business Play ball in the world’s most competitive city
www.nyc-mvp.com
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
BULLS FOOTBALL RECAP history for a single season. He had one of the finest games of any quarterback to ever wear the blue and white when he threw for a school-record 497 yards and four touchdowns at Toledo on November 12. The defense is led by linebacker Khalil Mack - one of the very best in the nation to play the position. When football fans leaf through
the NCAA record book, they will find Mack’s name at the top of two different record lists. His 16 career forced fumbles are two more than any other player in the sport’s history. Mack also shares the NCAA record for career tackles for loss with 75. He is the school’s first ever Butkus Award finalist and just the second player in UB history to earn an invitation to the Senior Bowl.
Mack has spearheaded a defensive attack that has allowed just 268 points on the season, the fewest in its FBS era. The Bulls blanked Western Michigan on October 12 for just its second ever shutout of a MAC opponent and first road shutout since 1965. UB has held three opponents to without a touchdown this season. With all the impressive
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Proud Sponsor of the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
BULLS FOOTBALL RECAP numbers recorded on the field, the two head coach Jeff Quinn are most pleased with are 976 and 2.812. They represent the highest APR score and grade point average, respectively, in school history. he Bulls will now play in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl on Dec. 21. It will be just their second bowl appearance in school history and one more highlight to an already memorable season.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
DEPTH CHARTS UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO WIDE RECEIVER (WR) 18 Fred Lee (6-2, 205, Sr.) 13 Devon Hughes (6-0, 188, Jr.)
OFFENSE LEFT TACKLE (LT) 70 John Kling (6-7, 305, Jr.) 50 Andre Davis (6-4, 320, Jr.)
WIDE RECEIVER (WR) 87 Boise Ross (6-0, 173, Fr.) 80 Malcolm Robinson (6-1, 199, R-Fr.)
LEFT GUARD (LG) 50 Andre Davis (6-4, 320, Jr.) 52 Todd Therrien (6-1, 291, R-Fr.)
DEFENSE DEFENSIVE END (DE) 95 Beau Bachtelle (6-5, 273, Sr.) 92 Tedroy Lynch (6-2, 249, Sr.)
CENTER (C) 71 Trevor Sales (6-2, 327, Jr.) 63 Andrew Borruso (6-1, 285, R-Fr.) RIGHT GUARD (RG 74 Robert Blodgett (605, 307, So.) 65 Dillon Guy (6-4, 320, Jr.)
NOSE GUARD 90 Kristjan Sokoli (6-5, 300, Jr.) 93 Dalton Barksdale (6-3, 304, Jr.)
RIGHT TACKLE (RT) 67 Jake Silas (6-7, 310, Jr.) 75 Albert McCoy (6-4, 277, R- Fr.)
DEFENSIVE END (DE) 34 Colby Way (6-4, 293, Sr.) 55 Brandon Crawford (6-2, 229, Fr.)
TIGHT END (TE) 89 Matt Weiser (6-5, 241, So.) or 81 Jimmy Gordon (6-5, 255, Sr.)
OFFENSIVE LINEBACKER (OLB) 46 Khalil Mack (6-4, 248, Sr.) 36 Jarrett Franklin (6-0, 200, Fr.)
QUARTERBACK (QB) 16 Joe Licata (6-2, 226, So.) 15 Alex Zordich (6-3, 227, Sr.)
INSIDE OFFENSIVE LINEBACKER 24 Lee Skinner (6-2, 233, Jr.) 52 Travis Pitzonka (6-1, 217, So.)
RUNNING BACK (TB) 32 Branden Oliver (5-6, 208, Sr.) 14 Anthony Taylor (5-10, 209, So.) FULLBACK (FB) 17 Alex Dennison (6-1, 242, Sr.) or 31 Kendall Patterson (6-0, 260, So.) WIDE RECEIVER (WR) 19 Alex Neutz (6-3, 205, Sr.) 86 Ron Willoughby (6-4, 196, So.)
INSIDE OFFENSIVE LINEBACKER 33 Blake Bean (6-1, 232, Jr.) or 9 Jake Stockman (6-2, 237, Jr.) or OFFENSIVE LINEBACKER (OLB) 29 Adam Redden (6-1, 202, Jr.) or 3 Okezie Alozie (6-0, 208, So.)
5 Marqus Baker (5-10, 181, So.) STRONG SAFETY (SS) 30 Okoye Houston (6-0, 209, Sr.) 20 Tomarris Bell (5-11, 206, Sr.) FREE SAFETY (FS) 15 Derek Brim (6-0, 199, Sr.) 10 Witney Sherry (6-0, 188, Jr.) CORNERBACK (CB) 22 Najja Johnson (6-0, 187, Sr.) 28 Dwellie Striggles (5-10, 185, Jr.) SPECIAL TEAMS HOLDER (H) 11 Tyler Grassman (6-1, 195, So.) 5 Tony Daniel (6-5, 206, So.) PUNT RETURNS (PR) 21 Devin Campbell (5-11, 205, So.) 19 Alex Neutz (6-3, 205, Sr.) KICK RETURNER 21 Devin Campbell (5-11, 205, So.) 30 Okoye Houston (6-0, 209, Sr.) PUNTER (P) 11 Tyler Grassman (6-1, 195, So.) 45 Patrick Clarke (6-2, 193, Jr.) KICKER (K) 45 Patrick Clarke (6-2, 193, Jr.) 11 Tyler Grassman (6-1, 195, So.)
CORNERBACK (CB) 4 Cortney Lester (6-0, 182, Jr.)
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY QUARTERBACK (QB) 18 Quinn Kaehler, 6-4, 210, Jr.-TR 6 Adam Dingwell, 6-4, 210, Jr.
LINEBACKER (LB) 36 Nick Tenhaeff, 6-2, 235, Sr.*** 55 Micah Seau, 6-3, 250, Fr.-RS
FULLBACK (FB) 40 Chad Young, 5-10, 240, Sr.*** 45 Mike Miller, 6-2, 235, Jr.-SQ
MIDDLE LINEBACKER (MLB) 48 Josh Gavert, 6-2, 220, Jr.** 54 Calvin Munson, 6-1, 215, Fr.-HS
TIGHT END (TE) 44 Adam Roberts, 6-3, 235, Jr.** 94 Robert Craighead, 6-3, 270, So.*
LINEBACKER (LB) 37 Vaness Harris, 6-2, 255, Sr.** 50 Derek Largent, 6-4, 240, Jr.*
WIDE RECEIVER (X) 24 Colin Lockett, 6-0, 185, Sr.*** 81 Eric Judge, 6-1, 190, Fr.-RS
CORNERBACK (CB) 34 J.J. Whittaker, 5-10, 185, Jr.-SQ 23 Damontae Kazee, 5-11, 175, Fr.-RS
RIGHT TACKLE (RT) 79 Terry Poole, 6-5, 300, Jr.-RS 67 Garrett Corbett, 6-5, 295, Jr.*
DEFENSE DEFENSIVE END (DE) 59 Jordan Thomas, 6-1, 255, Sr.*** 99 Jon Sanchez, 6-2, 265, So.*
WARRIOR (WAR) 26 Marcus Andrews, 6-1, 200, Sr.*** 30 T.J. Hickman, 6-0, 185, So.-SQ
WIDE RECEIVER (Z) 3 Ezell Ruffin, 6-1, 205, Jr.* 41 Tim Vizzi, 5-10, 185, Sr.*
DEFENSIVE TACKLE (DT) 97 Dontrell Onuoha, 6-2, 270, Jr.** 58 Alex Barrett, 6-3, 245, Fr.-RS
RUNNING BACK (TB) 4 Adam Muema, 5-10, 205, Jr.** 19 Donnel Pumphrey, 5-9, 155, Fr.-HS
DEFENSIVE END (DE) 47 Cody Galea, 6-3, 255, Jr.** 90 Everett Beed, 6-3, 255, Jr.*
OFFENSE LEFT TACKLE (LT) 78 Bryce Quigley, 6-5, 300, Sr.*** 67 Garrett Corbett, 6-5, 295, Jr.* LEFT GUARD (LG) 65 Japheth Gordon, 6-3, 300, Sr.* 56 Nico Siragusa, 6-5, 320, Fr.-RS CENTER (C) 73 Jordan Smith, 6-5, 280, So.* 71 Lenicio Noble, 6-2, 285, Jr.-TR RIGHT GUARD (RG) 72 Darrell Greene, 6-4, 300, So.* 56 Nico Siragusa, 6-5, 320, Fr.-RS
AZTEC (AZ) 20 Nat Berhe, 5-10, 200, Sr.*** 39 Rene Siluano, 5-10, 185, Sr.*** WARRIOR (WAR) 27 Eric Pinkins, 6-3, 215, Sr.*** 12 Malik Smith, 6-0, 170, Fr.-HS CORNERBACK (CB) 35 King Holder, 5-10, 165, Jr.** 16 David Lamar, 6-2, 185, Jr.*
SPECIAL TEAMS PUNTER (P) 77 Joel Alesi, 6-0, 235, Jr.* 43 John McGrory, 6-2, 180, Fr.-HS PLACEKICKER (PK) 49 Wes Feer, 5-11, 205, Sr.* 43 John McGrory, 6-2, 180, Fr.-HS KICKOFFS (KO) 49 Wes Feer, 5-11, 205, Sr.* 43 John McGrory, 6-2, 180, Fr.-HS HOLDER (H) 12 Jake Bernards, 6-5, 210, Sr.* 10 Dylan Denso, 6-2, 205, Sr.*** LONG SNAPPER (LS) 60 Jeff Overbaugh, 6-2, 235, So.* 61 Hunter Christensen, 6-2, 200, Fr.RS
IMAGE
KICKOFF RETURNS (KOR) 24 Colin Lockett, 6-0, 185, Sr.*** 41 Tim Vizzi, 5-10, 185, Sr.* PUNT RETURNS (PR) 41 Tim Vizzi, 5-10, 185, Sr.* 19 Donnel Pumphrey, 5-9, 155, Fr.-HS
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
CRAIG THOMSON Mountain West Commissioner
F
rom its inception in 1999, the Mountain West has been committed to excellence in intercollegiate athletics, while promoting the academic missions of its member institutions. Progressive in its approach, the MW continues to cultivate opportunities for studentathletes to compete at the highest level, while fostering academic achievement and sportsmanship. Now in its 15th year, the MW has been assertive in its involvement with the NCAA governance structure and has taken a leadership role in the overall administration of intercollegiate athletics. The Mountain West has marked several achievements over its first 14 years of existence, most notably
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
becoming the first to establish a sports television network dedicated solely to an intercollegiate athletic conference (The Mtn.). The Mountain West also was the first to experiment with the coaches’ challenge in the college football instant replay system, and was the first nonautomatic-qualifying BCS conference to participate in four BCS bowl games, winning three. Additionally, the Mountain West was the first conference to have a member institution with No. 1 overall picks in both the NFL and NBA drafts in the same year (Utah’s Alex Smith and Andrew Bogut, respectively in 2005). With San Diego State’s Stephen Strasburg claiming the No. 1 pick in the 2009 MLB Draft, the Mountain West is one of two conferences to have the No. 1 selection in each of the NFL, NBA and MLB drafts since the MW was founded in 1999. In 2011-12, the Mountain West was among the first conferences to implement a league-wide state-ofthe-art basketball instant replay system. The Mountain West is noted for its geographic diversity. Some of the most beautiful terrain and landscapes in the nation can be found within Mountain West
boundaries, including the majestic Rocky Mountain range, which borders five MW institutions (Air Force, Boise State, Colorado State, New Mexico and Utah State). The high plains of Wyoming (elevation 7,220 feet – the highest Division I campus in the nation) contrast with the desert cities of Las Vegas and Reno, home to UNLV and Nevada, respectively, while Fresno State, San Diego State and San Jose State add a West coast influence with their locations in Central, Southern and Northern California. The inclusion of the Hawai‘i football program extends the Mountain West footprint to the beautiful islands in the Pacific Ocean.
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The giant Idaho® Potato Truck has had a really big year. We covered over 25,000 miles visiting special events, retail outlets and friends of Idaho® Potatoes in 47 states. We helped raise money for Meals On Wheels Association of America and have now donated $200,000 to the worthy cause ourselves. Our truck and Idaho® Potato Farmer Mark Coombs have starred in yet another national television commercial. And media outlets all over the country have followed the truck’s travels. And the icing on the cake? Here we are as title sponsor of the 17th annual Famous Idaho® Potato Bowl Game.
IPC E0674B FIPB Spread16.75x10.875.indd 1
We look forward to a great game. And another great year of spreading the word about famous Idaho® Potatoes and our home state. Keep an eye out for us on the road. We’ll be the truck with the 30-foot-long Idaho® Potato.
IDAHOPOTATO.COM Proud Sponsor of the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl
11/14/13 2:02 PM
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
Emerald Bowl in San Francisco in 2002. Entering the 2013 season, the MW has six contracted bowl affiliations – the Las Vegas Bowl, San Diego Country Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl, Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl, Sheraton Hawai‘i Bowl, Famous Potato Idaho Bowl and Gildan New Mexico Bowl. An innovator in the postseason bowl structure, the MW engineered many “firsts,” as league teams have participated in five inaugural bowl games (2000 Silicon Valley, 2001 New Orleans, 2002 San Francisco (Emerald), 2005 Poinsettia, 2006 New Mexico), as well as placing the first non-automaticqualifying BCS team into a BCS bowl game with Utah’s appearance in the 2005 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.
HISTORY The Mountain West was conceived on May 26, 1998, when the presidents of eight institutions — Air Force, BYU, Colorado State, New Mexico, San Diego State, UNLV, Utah and Wyoming — decided to form a new NCAA Division I-A intercollegiate athletic conference. The split from a former 16-team conference re-established continuity and stability among the membership within the new league and signaled the continuation of its tradition-rich, longstanding athletic rivalries. Three of the MW’s eight original members have been conference rivals since the 1960s (New Mexico, Wyoming and Colorado State), while San Diego State (1978) and Air Force (1980) were longtime members as well. UNLV and TCU entered the fold in 1996 and the Rebels continued as one of the original eight institutions that formed the MW in 1999. TCU rejoined the group with its first year of competition in the Mountain West in 2005-06. With conference realignment sweeping the nation in recent years, the MW has been proactive in addressing
membership changes. Boise State University joined the Mountain West in 2011-12, followed by Fresno State and the University of Nevada on July 1, 2012. Also on July 1, 2012, the University of Hawai‘i became a football-only member of the Conference. On July 1, 2013, the Mountain West further expanded when San Jose State University and Utah State University joined the Conference, bringing to 11 the number of full-time member institutions and 12 footballplaying members. When the Mountain West officially began operations on July 1, 1999, the new league had in place a sevenyear contract with ESPN, giving the broadcaster exclusive national television rights to MW football and men’s basketball, and three-year agreements to send the league’s football champion to the Liberty Bowl and a second team to the Las Vegas Bowl. Commissioner Craig Thompson also arranged a third bowl tie-in each of the first three seasons (1999 Motor City, 2000 Silicon Valley, 2001 New Orleans) before securing a four-year deal with the | 66 |
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®
®
TM & © 2013 Turner Entertainment Networks, Inc. A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved. NCAA and March Madness are trademarks owned by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Photo: AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY to SDSU’s dynamic mix of ethnic, racial and social backgrounds. Responding to the need to be globally competitive, SDSU has dramatically expanded its international programs. The university leverages its strategic location on the Pacific Rim and the border of Latin America to advance international study and research opportunities. SDSU’s commitment to serving the community is steadfast. The nationally recognized Compact for Success between SDSU and the Sweetwater Union High School
District has increased Sweetwater’s college-going population by 120 percent. Similarly, SDSU’s leadership of the City Heights Educational Collaborative has improved the achievement of K-12 students while providing training and educational support for education professionals in three of San Diego’s most challenged inner-city schools. Indeed, SDSU is just as committed to improving quality of life and economic prosperity today as it was in 1897 when it became the first institution of higher education in San Diego.
ELLIOT HIRSHMAN SDSU President
F
from its modest beginning in 1897 as a teachers’ school perched above a downtown drugstore, San Diego State University has evolved into a major research university and an integral partner of the community it serves. It is difficult to imagine San Diego without San Diego State University. More community leaders within the San Diego region received their education at SDSU than at any other institution. In fact, about half of the university’s 260,000 living alumni have chosen to put their knowledge and skills to work right here, invigorating nearly every facet of San Diego’s professional and community life. SDSU and its graduates continue to drive progress and innovation with ground-breaking scientific discoveries and region-specific public health and environmental research. SDSU faculty were awarded $145 million in research funding last year – more than two University of California campuses. Students benefit from opportunities to engage in research alongside teacher/scholars who are at the leading edge of their fields. SDSU’s urban, cosmopolitan campus reflects the healthy diversity of our region – 52 percent of our undergraduates are students of color. Students from all walks of life and 125 nations contribute
ACADEMICS • In the last 20 years, SDSU has conferred more than 145,000 undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degrees. That’s 145,000 lives transformed by the power of an SDSU education. • SDSU received more than 69,000 undergraduate applications for the fall 2012 semester, among the highest of any university in the country. • More than 88 percent of all 2010 SDSU freshmen and 87.4 percent of 2010 freshmen of color enrolled for a second year, marking another solid gain in SDSU continuation rates, which are linked to graduation success. • SDSU’s joint doctoral programs in clinical psychology, biological sciences and chemistry, public affairs, social work and rehabilitation counseling are ranked among the top in the nation in U.S. News and World Report’s “America’s Best Graduate Schools.” • The fall 2012 freshman class (admitted students) had an average high school GPA of 3.79 and average SAT scores of 1146. RESEARCH • SDSU faculty and staff have been awarded more than $1.5 billion in external funding since 2000. • In 2011, a team including SDSU, the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and the University of Washington was awarded an $18.5-million National Science Foundation grant to develop robotic devices that interact seamlessly with the human body to restore or improve sensation and movement. • SDSU researchers in the 30,000-square-foot Donald P. Shiley BioScience Center—the first of its kind in the CSU—study the critical nexus of infection, inflammation and cardiovascular disease. Their multidisciplinary approach provides opportunities for mentorship of post doctoral, graduate and undergraduate students. • SDSU’s MS in regulatory affairs – a key area of the biotech industry – is one of only two programs of its kind in the country and is considered the most comprehensive. • SDSU’s annual Student Research Symposium is a two-day event at which participants present original research, scholarship or creative activities. More than 400 undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students participated in 2012. • Astronomy professor William Welsh is a participating scientist with NASA’s Keplar Mission, which has discovered five new planets outside our solar system; and astronomy professor Jerome Orosz has calculated the mass of the notorious black hole Cygnus X-1, shedding new light on its origin.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
JIM STERK SDSU Director of Athletics
J
im Sterk enters his fourth season as the University’s Director of Intercollegiate Athletics, having already left an indelible mark on San Diego State. He has overseen the most successful three seasons in San Diego State athletic history. In terms of on-the-field accomplishments, the Aztecs have won 17 conference team championships since the beginning of the 2011-12 academic year, and in the classroom, there have been a record number of scholar-athletes on The Mesa. In addition, Sterk oversaw SDSU’s record-breaking fundraising campaign this past season. In terms of competitive success, San Diego State continues to set itself apart, compiling the second-highest combined winning percentage in the country in football and men’s basketball since the beginning of the 2010-11 season at 75.7 percent (109-35). SDSU is one of only two schools in the state of California to advance to bowl games each of the last three years (Stanford) and was one of only 17 schools nationwide to have its men’s basketball program advance to each of the last four NCAA tournaments. The overall success of the program can best be demonstrated by the fact that a
then school-record nine athletic teams advanced to postseason play and scored postseason points in NCAA competition in 2011-12. Two of those programs - men’s golf and women’s outdoor track & field finished among the nation’s top 10. During the 2012-13 academic year, Aztec teams have won 12 conference titles, one year after winning five league titles. In his tenure, Sterk has watched six different San Diego State sports finish in the top 25 at NCAA championships, including four sports which finished in the top 10 of their NCAA championship. Since arriving at San Diego State in February 2010, Sterk, 57, has led the Aztec athletic department to fiscal stability. Despite state cutbacks, he has ended each of his first three years at SDSU in the black, and athletic department fundraising is at an all-time high. His impact has also been felt throughout the department, as he has hired or extended the contract of 15 current head coaches at San Diego State. The current collection of Aztec head coaches have combined to earn 33 conference coach-of-the-year honors. Sterk’s vision of a program that competes with the nation’s best on the field, and one that takes a back seat to no one in the classroom, is well on its way to becoming a reality. This past April, a school-record 305 individuals were honored as scholar student-athletes at the traditional year-end banquet, bettering the mark set in Sterk’s second year on The Mesa. Sterk came to SDSU from Washington State University, where he served as athletic director since 2000. Prior to his hiring at WSU, he was the AD at Portland State University from 1995 to 2000. Sterk also has a solid reputation and the respect of his peers across the country. The NCAA recognized him in 2006 as the Division IA Athletic Directors’ “Program of Excellence.” He oversaw a period of unparalleled success at Washington State with historic accomplishments both on and off the field. In his last three years at WSU, 13 Cou-
gar teams competed in NCAA postseason tournaments, including back-to-back trips by the men’s basketball team (2007 and 2008), while women’s rowing earned five NCAA championship bids, including a fourth-place finish in 2006, the highest finish ever by a WSU women’s team in NCAA competition Sterk graduated from Western Washington University in 1980, where he earned four letters in football and one in basketball. He was credited with a school-record 164 tackles during the 1977 season, garnering first-team NAIA District I all-star accolades. He was named team captain and MVP, helping the Vikings to the district championship game. On Feb. 6, 2010, Sterk was inducted into Western Washington’s Athletics Hall of Fame for his success in football. Sterk received his master’s degree in sports administration from Ohio University. In addition to SDSU, Washington State and Portland State, his professional career has also included positions at North Carolina, Maine, Seattle Pacific and Tulane. Sterk and his wife Debra have three children: Ashley (24), Amy (21), and Abby (18).
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
SDSU HEAD COACH
ROCKY LONG SDSU Head Coach
I
n the 14-year history of the Mountain West, no football coach is more synonymous with success than Aztec head coach Rocky Long. Named San Diego State’s 18th head coach on Jan. 12, 2011, he is in his third year at the helm of the Aztecs. He continues his role as the squad’s defensive coordinator, a position that he also held when he first arrived on campus in 2009. Long is the winningest head coach in the history of the Mountain West and has helped usher in two of the biggest turnarounds at MW schools - New Mexico and San Diego State. Over the last four-plus seasons, Long helped institute a hard-nosed, blue-collar, physical-style of football on Montezuma Mesa that revitalized a football program that had been struggling to find an identity for decades. In December of 2008, Long inherited one of the worst defensive units statistically in the country. That season, the Aztecs went 2-10 and posted one victory over a FBS team. The team’s defense allowed an average of 37.2 points, 460.8 yards, 247.5 rushing yards and had a passing efficiency defense rating of 151.5. San Diego State also ranked among the bottom eight nationally in all four of those categories, allowing 35 or more points in seven of its final eight games of the season. Enter Long and his attacking 3-3-5 defense and the improvement was immediate. Despite employing a drastically different style, Long, in his first year as SDSU’s defensive
coordinator in 2009, managed to shave more than a touchdown a game off the team’s average points allowed and took more than 78 yards per outing off of the total offense allowed figure. In 2010, Long built a top-40 defense that ceded 20 points or less six times, as the Aztecs posted a winning record for the first time in 12 years, claimed nine victories for the first time since 1977, and captured a bowl victory for the first time since 1969. The 2011 campaign was no different, as he became the first Aztec head coach to lead the team to a bowl game in his debut season. SDSU compiled an 8-5 record, including its first 3-0 start in 30 years, while also snapping a 19-game losing streak against Pac-10/12 foes and a 23-game skid vs. schools from automatic qualifying BCS conferences. Last season, Long garnered his second Mountain West Coach of the Year award after guiding the Aztecs to their first conference championship since 1998 and an unprecedented third straight bowl appearance. Despite a modest fifth-place prediction in the MW preseason poll, Long and SDSU closed out the regular season by winning seven straight games, matching the program’s longest victory streak since 1980-81. During that stretch, the Aztecs ranked fifth in the nation, allowing just 4.7 yards per play, while limiting the opposition to 19 points or less on five occasions. Long had already made the transition from defensive coordinator to head coach once before, as he directed New Mexico to unparalleled success from 1998-2008. During those 11 years, Long compiled a 65-69 record, including seven seasons with six victories or more. To put that accomplishment in perspective, consider that since 1984, the Lobos are 56143 with only three six-plus win seasons in the 17 campaigns without Long at the helm. At New Mexico, Long compiled a school-record 65 victories and led the Lobos to five bowl game appearances in his final seven seasons, despite inheriting a team that had only three winning seasons the previous 15 years. His teams were also bowl eligible in seven of his final eight campaigns. Long, the 2002 Mountain West Conference Coach of the Year, has earned a national reputation for producing one of the nation’s stingiest defensive units. In his final nine campaigns in Albuquerque, Long’s defensive units ranked among the top 30 in fewest yards allowed six times and among the top 40 nationally against the rush every year. In addition, six times his units were among the top 26 in fewest rushing yards allowed per
game, including fifth-place finishes in both 2001 and 2003. While at New Mexico, Long coached 13 players selected in the NFL Draft, 10 players who earned All-America honors and 44 firstteam all-conference selections. In addition, four Lobos garnered Academic All-America accolades five times during his tenure. And Long does not mince words when describing what his vision for his San Diego State football program is. “Everybody should anticipate that this program eventually will be competing for conference championships, year-in and yearout,” Long said. “Now, how many you win is determined by a whole lot of factors, but we ought to be able to get to the point where we compete yearly for it.” Prior to accepting the head coaching position at New Mexico, Long served as defensive coordinator for 12 seasons at three different schools. He was the defensive coordinator for two years under Bob Toledo at UCLA in 1996-97, for five seasons at Oregon State from 1991-95, and for five campaigns at Wyoming from 1981-85. He also served as an assistant coach at TCU and the CFL’s British Columbia Lions after starting his career at New Mexico as a graduate assistant coach in 1972. Originally a defensive back, Long became a three-year starter at quarterback for the Lobos from 1969-71. He earned team MVP honors three times and was the Western Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year as a senior. He is a 1974 graduate of New Mexico and was awarded an NCAA postgraduate scholarship.
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It's bowl season, are you ready for some of the most exciting match ups? Every game matters so it’s important to have instant access to everything at your fingertips. Gateway helps you stay in the know, so if you’re not at the big game, you are at least connected to the latest scores, breaking news and player stats so you can be on top of all that locker room buzz.
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
SDSU COACHING STAFF
Zach Arnett Defensive Grad Assistant
Daniel Gonzales Assistant Coach
Adam Hall Strength Coach
Lynell Hamilton Graduate Assistant
Jeff Horton Assistant Head Coach
Chris Jurek Assistant Strength
Dorian Keller Offensive Grad Assistant
Osia Lewis Assistant Coach
Rocky Long Head Coach
LeCharls McDaniel Assistant Coach
Kevin McGarry Assistant Coach
Mike Schmidt Assistant Coach
Brian Sipe Assistant Coach
Bob Toledo Offensive Coordinator
Tony White Assistant Coach
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ALL GLORY TO THE
HYPNOTOAD!
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY AZTECS
77 Joel Alesi P • 6-0 • Jr.
26 Marcus Andrews DB • 6-1 • Sr.
11 Kene Anigbogu WR • 6-4 • So.
58 Alex Barrett DL • 6-3 • Fr.
90 Everett Beed DL • 6-3 • Jr.
20 Nat Berhe DB • 5-10 • Sr.
12 Jake Bernards QB • 6-5 • Sr.
36 Connor Black WR • 6-4 • Fr.
87 Aaron Boesch TE • 6-5 • So.
89 Daniel Brunskill TE • 6-5 • Fr.
43 Kevin Campano DB • 5-10 • Jr.
61 Hunter Christensen LS • 6-2 • Fr.
80 Larry Clark WR • 6-4 • So.
67 Garrett Corbett OL • 6-5 • Jr.
94 Robert Craighead TE • 6-3 • So.
2 Christian Cumberlander WR • 6-3 • Fr.
10 Dylan Denso WR • 6-2 • Sr.
64 Zach Dilley OL • 6-5 • Jr.
6 Adam Dingwell QB • 6-4 • Jr.
46 Jacob Driver LB • 6-2 • Sr.
5 Chase Favreau QB • 6-1 • Fr.
49 Wes Feer K/P • 5-11 • Sr.
42 Jake Fely LB • 5-10 • Jr.
70 Arthur Flores OL • 6-5 • Fr.
47 Cody Galea DL • 6-3 • Jr.
96 Kenny Galea’i DL • 6-1 • So.
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LESS MESSY. MORE FRESHY.
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY AZTECS
7 Dwayne Garrett RB • 6-0 • So.
48 Josh Gavert LB • 6-2 • Jr.
65 Japheth Gordon OL • 6-3 • Sr. High)
38 Scott Graves LB • 5-10 • Sr.
72 Darrell Greene OL • 6-4 • So.
37 Vaness Harris LB • 6-2 • Sr.
86 Jemond Hazely WR • 6-1 • So.
76 Jonathan Henkel OL • 6-4 • So.
30 T.J. Hickman DB • 6-0 • So.
38 Chris Hokokian FB • 6-1 • So.
35 King Holder DB • 5-10 • Jr.
51 D.J. Hunter LB • 6-0 • Fr.
93 Malcolm Jackson DL • 6-3 • Fr.
15 Chad Jeffries QB • 6-2 • So.
62 Anthony Juarez OL • 6-6 • Fr.
81 Eric Judge WR • 6-1 • Fr.
18 Quinn Kaehler QB • 6-4 • Jr.
37 Garrett Kale WR • 6-1 • Fr.
23 Damontae Kazee DB • 5-11 • Fr.
42 Connor Keith FB • 6-1 • Fr.
16 David Lamar DB • 6-2 • Jr.
29 George Lamen LB • 6-1 • Fr.
50 Derek Largent LB 6-4 • Jr.
6 Gabe Lemon DB • 5-10 • Sr.
24 Colin Lockett WR • 6-0 • Sr.
14 Trey Lomax DB • 5-11 • Fr.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY AZTECS
74 Austin Maass OL • 6-4 • Fr.
32 Kendrick Mathis DB • 6-0 • Fr.
43 John McGrory K/P • 6-2 • Fr.
17 Seamus McMorrow K/P • 5-11 • So.
45 Fred Melifonwu LB • 6-5 • Fr.
98 Sam Meredith DL • 6-4 • Jr.
75 Kwayde Miller OL • 6-7 • Fr.
45 Mike Miller FB • 6-2 • Jr.
82 Lloyd Mills WR • 5-10 • Fr.
22 Kalan Montgomery DB • 6-1 • Fr.
44 Tyler Morris LB • 6-3 • Fr.
4 Adam Muema RB • 5-10 • Jr.
54 Calvin Munson LB • 6-1 • Fr.
71 Lenicio Noble OL • 6-2 • Jr.
97 Dontrell Onuoha DL • 6-2 • Jr.
60 Jeff Overbaugh LS • 6-2 • So.
27 Eric Pinkins DB • 6-3 • Sr.
83 Paul Pitts III WR • 6-0 • So.
79 Terry Poole OL • 6-5 • Jr.
18 Brandon Porter DB • 5-11 • Fr.
22 Chase Price RB • 5-8 • So.
19 Donnel Pumphrey RB • 5-9 • Fr.
52 Teddy Queen DL • 6-1 • Fr.
78 Bryce Quigley OL • 6-5 • Sr.
84 Darryl Richardson TE • 6-5 • Fr.
44 Adam Roberts TE • 6-3 • Jr.
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Werner Co..indd 1
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY AZTECS
57 Blake Rodgers LB • 6-1 • Fr.
69 Paul Rodriguez OL • 6-7 • So.
13 Pierre Romain DB • 5-8 • So.
66 Antonio Rosales OL • 6-4 • Fr.
48 Nick Rudolph TE • 6-3 • Fr.
3 Ezell Ruffin WR • 6-1 • Jr.
99 Jon Sanchez DL • 6-2 • So.
55 Micah Seau LB • 6-3 • Fr.
9 Stan Sedberry DB • 6-2 • So.
33 Paul Sierra RB • 5-9 • So.
39 Rene Siluano DB • 5-10 • Sr.
56 Nico Siragusa OL • 6-5 • Fr.
73 Jordan Smith OL • 6-5 • So.
12 Malik Smith DB • 6-0 • Fr.
26 Marcus Stamps RB 6-1 • Fr.
36 Nick Tenhaeff LB • 6-2 • Sr.
59 Jordan Thomas DL • 6-1 255 • Sr.
68 Devin Tomlinson OL • 6-4 • Fr.
30 Dakota Turner LB • 6-3 • Fr.
85 Andrew Van Voy FB • 6-2 • Fr.
24 Billy Vaughn, Jr. DB • 6-1 • Fr.
41 Tim Vizzi WR • 5-10 • Sr.
91 Jordan Watson DL • 6-5 • Fr.
88 David Wells TE • 6-5 • Fr.
34 Parker Wells FB • 5-10 • Fr.
34 J.J. Whittaker DB • 5-10 • Jr.
40 Chad Young FB • 5-10 • Sr.
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Filtered water on the go!
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
2013 SAN DIEGO STATE AZTEC FOOTBALL ROSTER No. 77 26 11
Name Joel Alesi Marcus Andrews Kene Anigbogu
Pos. P DB WR
Ht. 6-0 6-1 6-4
Wt. 235 200 205
Yr. Jr. Sr. So.
58 90 20 12 36
Alex Barrett Everett Beed Nat Berhe Jake Bernards Connor Black
DL DL DB QB WR
6-3 6-3 5-10 6-5 6-4
245 255 200 210 215
Fr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Fr.
87
Aaron Boesch
TE
6-5
245
So.
89
Daniel Brunskill
TE
6-5
255
Fr.
43
Kevin Campano
DB
5-10
165
Jr.
61
Hunter Christensen
LS
6-2
200
Fr.
80 67 94 2 10
Larry Clark Garrett Corbett Robert Craighead Christian Cumberlander Dylan Denso
WR OL TE WR WR
6-4 6-5 6-3 6-3 6-2
210 295 270 200 205
So. Jr. So. Fr. Sr.
64 6 46
Zach Dilley Adam Dingwell Jacob Driver
OL QB LB
6-5 6-4 6-2
300 210 220
Jr. Jr. Sr.
5
Chase Favreau
QB
6-1
195
Fr.
49
Wes Feer
K/P 5-11
205
Sr.
42 70 47 96 7 48 65 38
Jake Fely Arthur Flores Cody Galea Kenny Galea’i Dwayne Garrett Josh Gavert Japheth Gordon Scott Graves
LB OL DL DL RB LB OL LB
5-10 6-5 6-3 6-1 6-0 6-2 6-3 5-10
220 290 255 280 205 220 300 210
Jr. Fr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Sr. Sr.
72 37 86 76 30
Darrell Greene Vaness Harris Jemond Hazely Jonathan Henkel T.J. Hickman
OL LB WR OL DB
6-4 6-2 6-1 6-4 6-0
300 255 185 285 185
So. Sr. So. So. So.
38 35 51 93
Chris Hokokian King Holder D.J. Hunter Malcolm Jackson
FB DB LB DL
6-1 5-10 6-0 6-3
235 165 210 265
So. Jr. Fr. Fr.
15 62 81 18
Chad Jeffries Anthony Juarez Eric Judge Quinn Kaehler
QB OL WR QB
6-2 6-6 6-1 6-4
200 310 190 210
So. Fr. Fr. Jr.
37 23 42
Garrett Kale Damontae Kazee Connor Keith
WR 6-1 DB 5-11 FB 6-1
180 175 210
Fr. Fr. Fr.
16 29 50
David Lamar George Lamen Derek Largent
DB LB LB
6-2 6-1 6-4
185 235 240
Jr. Fr. Jr.
6
Gabe Lemon
DB
5-10
195
Sr.
24
Colin Lockett
WR 6-0
185
Sr.
14
Trey Lomax
DB
175
Fr.
5-11
Hometown/High School/College El Cajon, Calif./Christian High Los Angeles, Calif./Crenshaw High San Diego, Calif./Helix High/ Southwestern College Mesa, Ariz./Desert Ridge High Phelan, Calif./Serrano High Colton, Calif./Colton High Valencia, Calif./West Ranch High Wenatchee, Wash./ Wenatchee High Oak Harbor, Wash./Oak Harbor High/Santa Monica College Valley Center, Calif./ Valley Center High San Diego, Calif./Scripps Ranch High/Baker University Carlsbad, Calif./ La Costa Canyon High Venice, Calif./Venice High Sparks, Nev./Reed High Lakeside, Calif./El Capitan High LaGrange, Ga./Jireh Prep Laguna Niguel, Calif./ Dana Hills High Sun City, Calif./Paloma Valley High Rockwall, Texas/Rockwall High Carlsbad, Calif./ La Costa Canyon High Huntington Beach, Calif./ Edison High Chino Hills, Calif./Chino Hills High/Riverside College Oceanside, Calif./Oceanside High Denver, Colo./J.K. Mullen High Elk Grove, Calif./Franklin High Oceanside, Calif./Oceanside High Scottsdale, Ariz./Chaparral High Lakewood, Calif./Mayfair High Canyon Country, Calif./Canyon High Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif./ Tesoro High/Saddleback College Oakley, Calif./Freedom High Los Angeles, Calif./Dorsey High Corona, Calif./Santiago High Chula Vista, Calif./Otay Ranch High Riverside, Calif./ Martin Luther King High Fresno, Calif./Clovis North High Oceanside, Calif./Oceanside High San Diego, Calif./Mira Mesa High Spring Valley, Calif./ Mount Miguel High Glendora, Calif./Glendora High Corona, Calif./Centennial High San Diego, Calif./San Diego High Pleasant Hill, Calif./California High/Diablo Valley College Temecula, Calif./Great Oak High San Bernardino, Calif./Cajon High Grass Valley, Calif./ Nevada Union High San Diego, Calif./Madison High San Rafael, Calif./San Rafael High Hermosa Beach, Calif./Mira Costa High/El Camino College Mission Viejo, Calif./ Lutheran High Diamond Bar, Calif./ Diamond Bar High San Diego, Calif./Mira Mesa High
No. Name 74 Austin Maass
Pos. Ht. OL 6-4
Wt. 275
32 43
Kendrick Mathis John McGrory
DB 6-0 K/P 6-2
195 180
17
Seamus McMorrow
K/P 5-11
195
45 98 75 45
Fred Melifonwu Sam Meredith Kwayde Miller Mike Miller
LB DL OL FB
6-5 6-4 6-7 6-2
210 275 305 235
82 22 44 4 54
Lloyd Mills Kalan Montgomery Tyler Morris Adam Muema Calvin Munson
WR DB LB RB LB
5-10 6-1 6-3 5-10 6-1
165 170 205 205 215
71
Lenicio Noble
OL
6-2
285
97 60 27 83
Dontrell Onuoha Jeff Overbaugh Eric Pinkins Paul Pitts III
DL LS DB WR
6-2 6-2 6-3 6-0
270 235 215 185
79
Terry Poole
OL
6-5
300
18 22
Brandon Porter Chase Price
DB RB
5-11 5-8
185 200
19
Donnel Pumphrey
RB
5-9
155
52 78
Teddy Queen Bryce Quigley
DL OL
6-1 6-5
245 300
84 44 57
Darryl Richardson Adam Roberts Blake Rodgers
TE TE LB
6-5 6-3 6-1
220 235 220
69
Paul Rodriguez
OL
6-7
295
13 66 48 3
Pierre Romain Antonio Rosales Nick Rudolph Ezell Ruffin
DB OL TE WR
5-8 6-4 6-3 6-1
165 255 215 205
99 55 9 33
Jon Sanchez Micah Seau Stan Sedberry Paul Sierra
DL LB DB RB
6-2 6-3 6-2 5-9
265 250 210 185
39 56
Rene Siluano Nico Siragusa
DB OL
5-10 6-5
185 320
73 12 26 36 59 68 30 85
Jordan Smith Malik Smith Marcus Stamps Nick Tenhaeff Jordan Thomas Devin Tomlinson Dakota Turner Andrew Van Voy
OL DB RB LB DL OL LB FB
6-5 6-0 6-1 6-2 6-1 6-4 6-3 6-2
280 170 195 235 255 275 245 205
24 41
Billy Vaughn, Jr. Tim Vizzi
DB 6-1 WR 5-10
180 185
91 88 34 34 40
Jordan Watson David Wells Parker Wells J.J. Whittaker Chad Young
DL TE FB DB FB
255 220 220 185 240
6-5 6-5 5-10 5-10 5-10
Yr. Hometown/High School/College Fr. Mission Viejo, Calif./ Mission Viejo High Fr. Ventura, Calif./Buena High Fr. Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif./ Santa Margarita High So. San Diego, Calif./ St. Augustine High Fr. San Diego, Calif./Lincoln HS Jr. La Mesa, Calif./Helix High Fr. Ramona, Calif./Ramona High Jr. Manhattan Beach, Calif./Mira Costa High/El Camino College Fr. Chandler, Ariz./Chandler High Fr. Compton, Calif./Dominguez High Fr. Henderson, Nev./Foothill High Jr. Covina, Calif./Charter Oak High Fr. St. Charles, Mo./ Francis Howell High Jr. Las Vegas, Nev./Cheyenne High/ Phoenix Community College Jr. Indio, Calif./La Quinta High So. Anchorage, Alaska/Service High Sr. Sacramento, Calif./Inderkum High So. Rancho Cucamonga, Calif./Los Osos High Jr. Monterey, Calif./Seaside High/ Monterey Peninsula College Fr. Waggaman, La./John Curtis High So. Diamond Bar, Calif./Diamond Ranch High Fr. Las Vegas, Nev./ Canyon Springs High Fr. Temecula, Calif./Chaparral High Sr. Apple Valley, Calif./ Granite Hills High Fr. Seffner, Fla./Armwood High Jr. El Paso, Texas/Coronado High Fr. Coto de Caza, Calif./Tesoro High/ Univ. of Washington So. San Bernardino, Calif./ San Gorgonio High So. Los Angeles, Calif./Crenshaw High Fr. Tucson, Ariz./Tucson Magnet High Fr. Ventura, Calif./Ventura High Jr. Long Beach, Calif./Woodrow Wilson High So. Murrieta, Calif./Vista Murrieta High Fr. Spring Valley, Calif./Bishop’s High So. Albuquerque, N.M./La Cueva High So. Tijuana, Mexico/Castle Park High/Chula Vista, Calif. Sr. Oceanside, Calif./Oceanside High Fr. Chula Vista, Calif./ Mater Dei Catholic High So. Redlands, Calif./Redlands High Fr. Compton, Calif./Dominguez High Fr. Los Angeles, Calif./Jefferson High Sr. Atascadero, Calif./Atascadero High Sr. Redlands, Calif./Redlands High Fr. San Diego, Calif./Madison High Fr. Mililani, Hawaii/Mililani High Fr. Thousand Oaks, Calif./ Thousand Oaks High Fr. Los Angeles, Calif./Dorsey High Sr. Moorpark, Calif./Moorepark High/Ventura College Fr. Chicago, Ill./Hales Franciscan High Fr. Clovis, Calif./Clovis North High Fr. Las Flores, Calif./Tesoro High Jr. Oceanside, Calif./Oceanside High Sr. La Verne, Calif./Glendora High
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
AZTECS FOOTBALL RECAP GAME 1 vs. EASTERN ILLINOIS
GAME 2 at NO. 2/3 OHIO STATE
GAME 3 vs. OREGON STATE
SAN DIEGO - Eastern Illinois spoiled San Diego State’s season-opener by scoring three unanswered touchdowns in the second half to pull away for a 40-19 victory in front of 42,978 fans at Qualcomm Stadium. Aztec quarterback Adam Dingwell posted career-highs of 27 completions and 318 passing yards to go along with a school-record 63 attempts. However, the junior signal-caller threw four interceptions and lost a fumble as the Panthers converted three of those miscues into touchdowns to help secure the upset. SDSU scored on the opening drive as Wes Feer booted the first of his four field goals on night, before EIU responded with a 37-yard touchdown pass from Jimmy Garoppolo to Erik Lora with 11:14 to go in the first quarter. The Aztecs reclaimed the lead on their ensuing possession when wide receiver Colin Lockett sprinted 48 yards to paydirt on a reverse, putting the host school up 10-7. Feer then added another field goal from 35 yards out later in the period to extend the Aztec advantage to 13-7. Garoppolo, who finished the game with 361 yards on 31-of-46 attempts, threw a pair of TD passes in the second quarter, a 4-yard toss to Lora and a 62-yard strike to Keiondre Gober, thrusting the visitors in front by a 19-13 margin after both conversions attempts went awry. With time winding down in the half, Eric Pinkins’ fumble return gave SDSU the ball in Panther territory. However, the Aztecs had to settle for a field goal when their subsequent drive stalled at the 5-yard line, giving the contest its 19-16 score at intermission. After holding EIU to a three-and-out to start the third quarter, SDSU knotted the game at 1919 when Feer connected from 38 yards away with just over four minutes elapsed. However, the Panthers took the ball and marched 75 yards in 12 plays, taking the lead for good when running back Taylor Duncan scored on a two-yard run with 7:36 remaining in the period After limiting the Aztecs to just four plays on their next possession, Sheperd Little returned the ensuing punt 60 yards to put EIU up 33-19 early in the fourth quarter. Later in the period, Duncan closed out the scoring with a 45-yard touchdown burst with 4:40 left. Despite maintaining a nearly 16-minute advantage in time of possession and running the fourth-most plays from scrimmage in school history (99), SDSU was outgained 533-440 in total offense.
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Making its first appearance in Ohio Stadium since 2005, San Diego State came up on the short end of 42-7 decision against No. 3/2 Ohio State in front of 104,984 fans. The Buckeyes scored six touchdowns on their first nine drives to build an insurmountable lead and maintained a 263-64 advantage in Junior quarterback Quinn Kaehler made his Aztec debut, completing 22 of 36 passes for 216 yards with one touchdown and one interception after replacing an injured Adam Dingwell late in the first quarter. The transfer from Diablo Valley College went 4-4 on SDSU’s lone scoring drive, connecting with wide receivers Ezell Ruffin and Colin Lockett for a pair of 18-yard receptions following a 17-yard completion to tight end Adam Roberts. Freshman running back Donnel Pumphrey then gained 17 yards on two carries before Kaehler hit fullback Chad Young on 2-yard swing pass to cap the 11-play, 66-yard march with 2:54 remaining in the third quarter. Kaehler also directed a 10-play 62-yard drive late in the second half, fueled by two 17-yard strikes to reserve tight end Robert Craighead and Ruffin. However, the Aztecs came up empty after reaching the Ohio State 2, as Kaehler’s short toss to Ruffin was broken up by Doran Grant in the end zone with no time left on the clock. Still, Ruffin finished with a career-high six receptions for 80 yards, while Lockett added six catches for 58 yards. Lockett also returned five kickoffs for 105 yards to become SDSU’s alltime leader in kickoff return yardage. The Buckeyes opened the scoring on their initial possession, driving 50 yards on eight plays, as Dontre Wilson found the end zone on a 7-yard sweep. Following an OSU interception and an exchange of punts, the Buckeyes put together another scoring march, culminating in a 27-yard touchdown pass from Kenny Guiton to Corey Brown. The Ohio State duo also combined on a 24-yard scoring strike in the third quarter that gave the host school a 42-0 cushion. Guiton passed for 152 yards on 21-of-30 attempts with two TDs and an interception after relieving injured starter Braxton Miller in the first quarter. Guiton also added 83 yards on the ground, highlighted by a 44-yard TD run on a quarterback keeper in the second quarter. The Aztec defense was led by Vaness Harris, who posted eight tackles, including four solo stops, in his first start of the season, while Damontae Kazee made six unassisted tackles of his own. Kazee, a redshirt freshman, also recorded his first collegiate interception in the second quarter.
SAN DIEGO - Sean Mannion threw three touchdowns and Oregon State scored three times in the fourth quarter to come from behind and defeat San Diego State 34-30. After Mannion hit Terron Ward for a 10-yard score to pull Oregon State within 30-28, cornerback Steven Nelson intercepted Quinn Kaehler’s pass and returned it 16 yards to give the Beavers the lead with 2:38 remaining in the game. Kaehler, who was making his first career start and became just the second walk-on quarterback in the country to start in 2013, was intercepted again on the next possession by Ryan Murphy to seal the win for the Beavers. The Aztecs took a 7-0 lead on their opening possession when Kaehler found true freshman Donnel Pumphrey on a screen pass for a 23yard touchdown, the first of Pumphrey’s career. OSU responded with back-to-back touchdowns. First, Terron Ward scored on a 1-yard run and then Mannion connected on a 2-yard pass to Kellen Clute. In SDSU’s ensuing possession, Kaehler found a streaking Colin Lockett, who evaded a tackle at midfield and scored for an 80-yard play. It was the longest catch by an Aztec since 2010. In the second quarter, San Diego State used a career-long 45-yard field goal by Wes Feer and a 2-yard run by Adam Muema to take open up a 24-14 lead at the half. Feer made it 27-14 Aztecs with a 40-yard field goal with 1:55 left in the third quarter. The Beavers answered in the fourth with a 10-play, 65-yard drive, capped by a 2-yard pass from Mannion to Kevin Cummings. Feer made another field for with 5:18 left to put SDSU up, 30-21, but Ward’s 10-yard TD reception and the Nelson interception return for a score sealed the win for OSU. Kaehler completed 16 of 24 passes for 251 yards and two touchdowns after taking over the starting job when Adam Dingwell injured his back last week against Ohio State. His pass efficiency rating of 158.74 was the highest by an Aztec quarterback in their starting debut since Kevin McKechnie had a 291.82 mark on Sept. 5, 1997, against Navy. The 30 points that SDSU scored was also its most in an Aztec quarterback debut since that 1997 game, when SDSU beat the Midshipmen, 45-31. Lockett finished with five catches for 113 yards, the fourth 100-yard game of his career, and Muema rushed a career-high 28 times for 71 yards and a touchdown. King Holder had a career-high 11 tackles and a career-best two PBUs to pace the San Diego State defense. Nat Berhe added nine tackles and Eric Pinkins recorded eight stops. Both teams were penalized heavily as Oregon State committed 13 penalties for 99 yards and the Aztecs committed nine penalties for 87 yards. Mannion completed 38 of 55 attempts for 367 yards, and the Oregon State rushing game was held to just 10 yards.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
AZTECS FOOTBALL RECAP GAME 4 at NEW MEXICO STATE
GAME 5 vs. NEVADA
GAME 6 at AIR FORCE
LAS CRUCES, N.M. - Behind Donnel Pumphrey’s three second-half touchdowns, San Diego State overcame a slow start to defeat New Mexico State, 26-16, on Sept. 28 at Aggie Memorial Stadium. Pumphrey rushed for a career-high 167 yards on 19 carries, while Quinn Kaehler completed 22 of 34 passes for 229 yards to help the Aztecs (13) post their first victory of the season and keep the Aggies (0-5) winless on the year. With the triumph, SDSU has now captured the last seven meetings against NMSU and raised its record to 9-1-1 in the all-time series. But it wasn’t easy. The Aztecs watched the Aggies open with 16 unanswered points, while Pumphrey was held to just 14 yards on four rushes before intermission. The SDSU running back took charge in the second half, however, exploding for 153 yards to finish with the highest rushing yardage by an Aztec freshman since Ronnie Hillman gained 228 in the 2010 Poinsettia Bowl. The Aztecs quickly stole the momentum, however, as David Lamar scooped up Sam Meredith’s blocked extra point and raced 89 yards for a two-point defensive conversion, which narrowed the gap to 16-2. Buoyed by its good fortune, the SDSU offense began to assert itself at this juncture. After netting just 12 yards on 10 plays during its first four possessions, the Aztecs racked up 429 yards the rest of the way, beginning with a 68-yard drived capped by a Wes Feer 25-yard field goal, which cut the margin to 16-5 with 6:41 elapsed in the second quarter. SDSU put together another long march on its first series of the second half and once again and found itself in a fourth down situation from the Aggie 22. Disdaining a field-goal attempt, Kaehler’s pass was intercepted by Greg Callender at the 11, but an NMSU holding penalty nullified the turnover. Given new life, the Aztecs scored on the next play when Pumphrey swept around right end for 12 yards into the end zone, which narrowed the gap to 16-11. Although Kaehler was intercepted on the ensuing two-point conversion try, SDSU had wrested the momentum away from the Aggies, limiting the hosts to just three first downs for the remainder of the contest. The Aztecs then took the lead for the first time when Pumphrey scored on a two-yard run on the first play of the fourth quarter to complete an eight-play, 60-yard drive. Later in the period, Pumphrey sealed the win on a 43-yard dash with 2:51 left on the clock. SDSU held NMSU to 40 yards rushing on 27 attempts and came away with three sacks. Individually, Josh Gavert tied a career-high with seven tackles, while Eric Pinkins recorded his second fumble recovery of the season and third of his career.
SAN DIEGO - Quinn Kaehler hit Eric Judge with a 13-yard touchdown pass on the fifth play of overtime to lift San Diego State to a thrilling 51-44 triumph over Nevada in its 2013 Mountain West opener last Friday at Qualcomm Stadium. The 95 combined points marked the highest scoring game the Aztecs have won in the Division-I era, which dates back to 1969. Adam Muema rushed for 134 on 24 carries with two touchdowns, while Donnel Pumphrey added 112 yards of his own, including a season-long 72-yard burst on SDSU’s first possession that put the host school in front, 7-0. The Wolf Pack evened the score later in the period on a Kendall Brock 1-yard plunge to cap a 13-play, 75-yard drive, setting the stage for a wild second quarter that witnessed three lead changes. Trailing 17-14 with 46 seconds to go before halftime, the Aztecs pulled to within one when Nevada punter Chase Tenpenny booted the ball out of the end zone for a safety following a bad snap. After the ensuing free kick, SDSU promptly drove into Wolf Pack territory, where Kaehler connected with Dylan Denso for 25-yard scoring strike with just nine ticks on the clock, giving the Scarlet and Black a 23-17 advantage heading into the locker room. The Aztecs tacked on three additional touchdowns in the third quarter, converting a pair of Wolf Pack fumbles into short scoring runs by Muema and Tim Vizzi, while Kaehler hooked up with Judge on a 5-yard strike to punctuate a 9-play, 65-yard march late in the period that provided SDSU a seemingly comfortable 44-23 cushion. However, Nevada fought back with 21 unanswered points in the fourth quarter, including a 5-yard touchdown pass from Cody Fajardo to Richy Turner with 1:38 left in regulation to tie the score at 44-44. SDSU won the overtime coin toss and ran five plays to reclaim the lead. Muema gained 12 yards on a screen pass and pair of runs before Kaehler found Judge in the back of the end zone for the go-ahead score. Despite allowing 206 yards during the Wolf Pack’s frantic fourth-quarter rally, the Aztec defense clamped down on Nevada’s overtime possession. After a false start penalty and a fouryard rush by Brock, SDSU forced three straight Fajardo incompletions to seal the victory. In his first collegiate start in place of an injured Colin Lockett, Judge caught 6 passes for 54 yards and added 4 kickoff returns for 78 yards, while Kaehler was 23-for-32 passing with a career-high 286 yards and three touchdowns. Defensively, four of the Aztecs’ top-five tacklers posted career-bests, including Derek Largent (10), Malik Smith (10), Josh Gavert (9) and Nick Tenhaeff (8).
USAF ACADEMY, Colo. (AP) - Quinn Kaehler threw two touchdown passes in the fourth quarter and Donnel Pumphrey scored on a 10-yard run with 1:39 remaining, helping San Diego State rally for a 27-20 victory over Air Force in a contest that was played despite the partial government shutdown. Down by 14 heading into the fourth quarter, the Aztecs (3-3, 2-0 Mountain West) scored 21 straight points to escape with the win after missing two extra points and a field goal. San Diego State is 2-151-1 in program history when trailing by 14 or more points in the final quarter. Kaehler finished 15 of 26 for 249 yards and three touchdowns. Pumphrey had 117 yards rushing along with another 43 receiving and a score. Backup Nate Romine scored on a 16-yard run and threw a 71-yard TD pass for the Falcons (16, 0-5) in a game they didn’t know would even be staged until it was given the official go-ahead about 27 hours before kickoff. Will Conant made two long field goals, including a 52-yarder that bounced in off the left upright. His counterpart, Wes Feer, had a field goal and an extra point clang away no good off the same left goal post. When Kaehler hit Pumphrey for a 20-yard TD early in the fourth quarter to begin San Diego State’s comeback, coach Rocky Long sent out backup kicker Seamus McMorrow, who made the extra point. A few plays later, Kaehler found a wide open Ezell Ruffin for a 62-yard score. But McMorrow had his point-after attempt blocked by Troy Timmerman, making it 20-19. After forcing the Falcons to punt, Kaehler marched the Aztecs down the field and Pumphrey punctuated the winning drive with a run up the middle for a score. Kaehler threw a pass to Tim Vizzi for the 2-point conversion. Of the 45 schools that opened 0-3 since 2010, the Aztecs join only Houston (2012) as the only teams to even its record at 3-3 after six contests. Romine received the call to go in shortly after starter Karson Roberts came off the field in the first quarter with an undisclosed injury. Romine directed a scoring drive in his first series, capping it off with a 16-yard TD run early in the second quarter. San Diego State controlled the clock and outgained the Falcons in the first half, only to trail 10-6 when Conant connected on a 48-yard field goal on the last play before halftime. The Aztecs took an early lead after Kaehler found a wide open Eric Judge for a 44-yard score. But Wes Feer’s extra-point attempt hit the left upright and bounded away. Earlier in the quarter, Feer’s 37-yard field goal try clanged off the left goal post. It was that kind of half for San Diego State. Adam Muema had a fumble, Kaehler threw an interception off the hands of Muema and Pumphrey was stopped at the 1 on fourth down by Air Force safety Christian Spears. For a third straight week, the Falcons let a halftime lead slip away.
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Available At
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
AZTECS FOOTBALL RECAP GAME 7 vs. NO. 15/18 FRESNO STATE
GAME 8 vs. NEW MEXICO
GAME 9 at SAN JOSE STATE
SAN DIEGO (AP) - No. 15 Fresno State defeated a game San Diego State team, 35-28, in overtime on Oct. 26 at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego. Marteze Waller’s 1-yard touchdown run on Fresno State’s first possession in overtime lifted the Bulldogs (7-0, 4-0 Mountain West). Fresno State held on for the win when San Diego State quarterback Quinn Kaehler’s fourthdown pass to Dylan Denso was knocked away by Derron Smith. Carr finished 35 of 57 for 298 yards passing and two touchdowns - both in the second half. The Bulldogs were stymied in part to the various blitzes the Aztecs were employing. The Aztecs (3-4, 2-1) trailed 28-14 in the fourth quarter before Aaron Boesch scored on a 1-yard run with 9:37 to go. Tim Vizzi recovered the ensuing onside kick and Chad Young’s 27-yard scoring run tied it at 28-all with 7 minutes remaining. The Aztecs quickly got the ball back when Fresno State went three-and-out. SDSU converted at the Fresno State 27-yard line on fourth down with 47 seconds left on Adam Muema’s three-yard run. The Aztecs advanced the ball to the 20 before Seamus McMorrow came on for the potential game-winning kick. McMorrow, who earlier missed from 40 yards, had his 37-yard field-goal attempt blocked by Jensen as time expired in regulation. The Bulldogs earlier extended their lead with a key defensive play. With San Diego State trailing 21-14, Kaehler completed a pass to Ezell Ruffin to the Fresno State 21-yard line. However, Jonathan Norton forced a fumble and Ejiro Ederaine returned it 78 yards to extend the lead to 14 points with about 10 minutes to go. The touchdown stood after a long review. Long wasn’t sure the call was correct. Ruffin finished with 10 catches for 181 yards. Carr got off to a slow start, missing 11 of his first 15 pass attempts. Then, as he lined up split to the left side as wide receiver Isaiah Burse took a direct snap and scored on a 10-yard run to give the Bulldogs a 7-0 lead with 8:40 to go in the first quarter. Muema scored twice to put the Aztecs ahead. His 10-yard TD run tied the score with 8:43 remaining in the second quarter, and the go-ahead score came on a 1-yard run with 6 1/2 minutes to go in the third. Davante Adams tied the score on an 11-yard scoring reception about 4 minutes later. His 16yard reception put the Bulldogs ahead 21-14 with 12 1/2 minutes left in the fourth. Carr struggled in the first half, completing 15 of 30 passes for 98 yards and no touchdowns. Thanks to his rough half, San Diego State outgained Fresno State over the first 30 minutes, 233-111. The Aztecs had more yards rushing (50-13), yards passing (183-98) and first downs (11-8). Kaehler completed 12 of his 24 pass attempts. He finished 21 for 39 for 337 yards and no TDs.
SAN DIEGO - Adam Muema rushed for a season-high 233 yards and three touchdowns to lead San Diego State to a 35-30 victory over New Mexico at Qualcomm Stadium. Ezell Ruffin added 165 receiving yards and two touchdowns on seven catches for the Aztecs, who never trailed in the game. SDSU came out of the gates firing with a 75yard touchdown pass from Quinn Kaehler to Ruffin on the very first play of the game. It was the first score by San Diego State on its opening play from scrimmage since Sept. 17, 2005 at Ohio State. After forcing a Lobo punt, which was downed on the Aztec 4, SDSU marched 96 yards on nine plays over 4:13, culminating with a 4-yard touchdown run by Muema. UNM answered on its ensuing possession when Teriyon Gipson took it 20 yards across the goal line to get UNM on the scoreboard. The Lobos quickly got to the SDSU’s 7 on their first possession of the third quarter, but San Diego State’s defense held firm, allowing just a 20yard field goal by Justus Adams. The Aztecs answered with an 8-play, 71-yard drive, highlighted by a 33-yard run by Muema and ending when Kaehler found Ruffin for a 24yard strike on a 3rd and 8 play. UNM responded with a 6-play, 72-yard drive and 18-yard touchdown scamper by Crusoe Gongbay to get New Mexico back to within four at 21-17 after the end of three quarters. To kick off the fourth quarter, SDSU put together a monstrous 17-play, 87-yard drive that covered 8:28, finishing with a 2-yard Muema rushing score on a 4th and goal, putting San Diego State up by a 28-17 margin. The Lobos continued to fight, marching 72 yards on eight plays over 3:22 before Gipson scored his second touchdown of the game on a 5-yard run. Down by five, UNM went for the 2-point conversion, but Kasey Carrier was stopped by Nat Berhe at the goal line. SDSU looked to put the game away with a 7-play, 75-yard drive, all by Muema, ending with a 1-yard touchdown (his third of the game) with just 1:50 left. New Mexico took advantage of San Diego State’s prevent defense with a 5-play, 75-yard drive over just 1:04. Clayton Mitchem found Tyler Duncan for a 36-yard score, bringing the Lobos to within five at 35-30. UNM tried an onside kick, but the Aztecs recovered the ball and got into victory formation for the 35-30 triumph. Kaehler finished 16-for-21 for 201 yards and two touchdowns. Muema’s 233 yards were the 17th most in a game in program . It was his third career 200yard game. Ruffin, meanwhile, went over 100 yards receiving for the third straight game and had his first-ever multiple touchdown game. San Diego State won its sixth straight Mountain West game following a MW loss.
SAN JOSE, Calif. - San Diego State rallied with a 22-point fourth quarter to come from behind to defeat San José State, 34-30, at Spartan Stadium in San Jose, Calif. The Aztecs, who trailed by 14 (20-6) in the first half and by 11 (23-12) after three quarters, exploded for 22 points in the final quarter, their most in the final quarter in the Mountain West era (since 1999). The momentum changed in the game when Damontae Kazee blocked an Austin Lopez field goal attempt early in the fourth quarter, which allowed Nat Berhe to return the ball 56 yards to the SJSU 34. On the ensuing play, Donnel Pumphrey scampered 34 yards down the sideline for the touchdown, followed by a Quinn Kaehler to Dylan Denso 2-point conversion pass to get SDSU to within three points at 23-20. San José State, however, answered with a 9 play, 83-yard drive, ending with a 12-yard pass from David Fales to Tim Crawley. Down by 10, San Diego State responded by marching 74 yards on seven plays in just 2:19, culmination with a 1-yard TD pass from Kaehler to Adam Roberts. The Aztec defense then forced the Spartans into a 3 and out and, after just a 25-yard punt, gave the offense the ball at the SJSU 38 with 6:00 left. SDSU stayed alive when Kaehler found Lockett for a 12-yard pass on 4th and 7 on San Diego State’s fifth play of the drive. Adam Muema then finished it with a 12-yard touchdown run, giving the Aztecs their first lead of the game at 34-30 with 3:32 remaining. SDSU stood tall once again, forcing San José State into a 4th and 10, before Fales’ wobbly pass down the sideline was picked off by J.J. Whittaker. Three straight Muema rushes brought up a 4th and 1 on the Spartan 16. Muema answered with a 2-yard run, sealing the San Diego State comeback victory. SDSU rallied from an 11-point deficit in the fourth quarter for the fifth time in program history, improving to just 5-174-2 under that situation. The win was San Diego State’s fifth in six games, 11th in 12 Mountain West contests, fifth in six road games and sixth straight in November. Muema posted his third straight 100-yard rushing game with 113 yards and two touchdowns, while Pumphrey had 78 yards and a score on 10 attempts. Kaehler passed for 235 yards and two touchdowns and Lockett had six catches for 90 yards and a score. Eric Pinkins paced the Aztec defense with seven tackles, two PBUs and a tackle for loss, while Nick Tenhaeff had two TFL, a sack and his first career interception.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
AZTECS FOOTBALL RECAP GAME 10 at HAWAI’I
GAME 11 vs. BOISE STATE
GAME 12 at UNLV
HONOLULU - Adam Muema rushed 163 yards to lead San Diego State to another come-frombehind victory over Hawai’i at Aloha Stadium. The win was the sixth of the season for the Aztecs, who became bowl eligible for the fourth consecutive season after failing to make a bowl the previous 11 years. SDSU rallied from a 7-point deficit three times in the game and won its fourth straight contest when trailing at the half. Down 21-14 with 6:20 left, San Diego State put together an 8-play, 82-yard drive over 3:50, culminating with a 14-yard touchdown run by Chad Young. The Aztec defense then forced the Warriors to punt with 54 seconds left. Starting on its own 28, SDSU got into UH territory when Quinn Kaehler found Dylan Denso with a 19-yard pass on a 3rd and 8. Denso, however, fumbled the ball, giving Hawai’i a last chance to end the game in regulation. The Warriors’ Hail Mary at the end of regulation was knocked down by San Diego State’s Nat Berhe, forcing overtime for the third time this year and fourth time in 16 contests. As they had done for most of the game, the Aztecs let Muema and the offensive line do the work. Muema ran it three times for 25 yards on the overtime drive with rushes of 11 yards and 12 yards before ending with a 2-yard score. The PAT by Seamus McMorrow put SDSU up by seven. After a no gain by Joey Iosefa, San Diego State’s Eric Pinkins sacked UH quarterback Sean Schroeder, forcing a 3rd and 20. The Aztecs then forced Schroeder into throwing two more incompletions, sealing the win for SDSU. Down, 14-7, at halftime, the Aztecs put together a 8-play, 78-yard drive on their first opening possession, gaining all 78 yards on the ground and taking advantage of a roughing the kicker by a Warrior player on 4th down. Donnel Pumphrey officially tied it at 14-14 on a 30-yard touchdown run down the left side of the field. UH took its third lead of the game to start the fourth quarter, going 86 yards on 16 plays and taking up 7:17 of clock time before Schroeder found Iosefa for an 8-yard touchdown on a dump pass on 3rd and 6. Muema finished with 163 yards and a touchdown on 24 attempts (6.8 avg.), his fourth straight 100-yard rushing game, fifth of the season and 13th of his career. Lockett picked up his second 100-yard receiving game and fifth of his career with four catches for 106 yards and the touchdown, while Ezell Ruffin just missed a 100-yard game with four receptions for 99 yards. Quinn Kaehler threw for 265 yards and a touchdown.
SAN DIEGO - Quinn Kaehler threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Colin Lockett just inside the right pylon to give San Diego State a 34-31, overtime win over Boise State at Qualcomm Stadium. It was the second straight overtime game and fourth of the season for the Aztecs. The four overtime games are the most in the FBS and tied for the most in FBS history. Boise State had taken a 31-28 lead in overtime when Dan Goodale, who missed a 43-yard field goal as time expired in regulation, made a 35-yarder on the Broncos’ first possession of extra time. SDSU then used three straight Adam Muema rushes for 15 yards to get to the BSU 10. After Donnel Pumphrey was stopped for no gain on 1st and 10, Kaehler found Lockett in the corner of the end zone for the game-winner. San Diego State trailed 28-21 late in the fourth quarter until Tim Vizzi returned a punt 41 yards for a touchdown with 4:04 left. It was the Aztecs’ first punt return for a touchdown since Kyle Conerly had an 87-yard TD return in 2002 vs. UNLV. SDSU jumped out to a 7-0 lead with 4:15 left in the first quarter, putting together a 12-play, 70yard drive over 6:48, culminating with a 2-yard run by Muema. Boise State wasted no time tying the game up as Bryan Douglas returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown. San Diego State took back the lead on its first drive of the second quarter when Kaehler found Adam Roberts for a 3-yard touchdown strike. The Broncos tied it again midway through the third quarter on Jay Ajai’s 31-yard touchdown run, and then got the ball right back after the Aztecs fumbled a kick return. BSU took advantage of the short 24-yard field as Grant Hedrick found Shane Williams-Rhodes with a 12-yard touchdown pass, giving Boise State its first lead of the game at 21-14 with 5:02 left in the third quarter. SDSU got all the way to the Bronco 4 to kick off the fourth quarter, but was unable to convert a 4th down, giving the ball back to BSU. On a 3rd and 6, however, J.J. Whittaker intercepted Hedrick’s pass and returned it 18 yards to tie the game back up at 21-21. It was Whittaker’s second interception of the game. Boise State recaptured the lead at 28-21 when Hedrick hooked up with Matt Miller with a 10yard pass with 8:02 left in the fourth quarter. On the ensuing drive, San Diego State got to the Bronco 39, but Kaehler’s deep pass was intercepted by Donte Deayon at the 1. BSU gained eight yards on a pair of rushes, but Hedrick was sacked by Nick Tenhaeff on a 3rd and 2, Tenhaeff’s second of the game. That set up Vizzi’s game-tying 41-yard punt return for a touchdown. Kaehler finished 23-for-37 for 288 yards and two touchdowns to lead the Aztecs. SDSU became the first team to beat the Broncos in consecutive seasons since Washington State did it in 2000 and 2001.
LAS VEGAS -- The San Diego State defense couldn’t stop UNLV’s passing attack in a 45-19 loss in Las Vegas in the regular season finale for both teams. The Aztecs had taken the lead just 41 seconds into the game when quarterback Quinn Kaehler found Colin Lockett with a 39-yard touchdown strike. The Rebels, however, responded with 31 straight points through the 11:36 mark of the third quarter and this time was too much for SDSU to overcome. UNLV did most of its damage through the air as quarterback Caleb Herring was 20-for-30 for 270 yards and five touchdowns. The five touchdowns tied a school single-game record. Devante Davis was Herring’s main target, exploding for eight catches, 171 yards and four touchdowns. The four touchdowns also tied a school single-game record. San Diego State, which trailed, 24-7, at the half, finally got its second touchdown of the game with 2:27 left in the third quarter when Las Vegas native Donnel Pumphrey scored on a 1-yard run. The touchdown by the true freshman was the culmination of an 11-play, 59-yard drive. After a missed extra-point attempt by the Aztecs, the Rebels added two more touchdowns to open up a 45-13 lead early in the fourth quarter. With 7:17 left in the fourth quarter, SDSU’s Tim Vizzi returned a punt 71 yards for a touchdown. It was his second straight game with a punt return for a touchdown after San Diego State had gone 11 years without one. His two punt returns for a touchdown in a season tied a school record, while his two career punt returns for a score are tied for third. The 2-point conversion attempt by the Aztecs was stopped and the game would finish at 45-19. Pumphrey rushed for 87 yards and a touchdown on 13 attempts (6.7 avg.) to pace the SDSU rushing attack, which was limited as leading rusher Adam Muema (12 carries, 11 yards) was battling an ankle injury. Kaehler threw for 239 yards and a touchdown. He was 24-for-46 with two interceptions. Lockett finished with seven catches for 98 yards and a touchdown, while Ezell Ruffin had five receptions for 55 yards. Vaness Harris led the San Diego State defense with seven tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss. Josh Gavert added five stops (four solo) with a sack. The loss snapped many streaks for the Aztecs, including a four-game winning streak, an eightgame November winning streak, a four-game road winning streak, a six-game road winning streak against unranked teams and a four-game conference willing streak, among others.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL HUMANITARIAN AWARD WINNER FRED LEE
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UFFALO, NY - Senior wide receiver Fred Lee was recognized on September 17th as a member of the 2013 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team, chosen from a record-setting 150 candidates. Lee was surprised with a presentation at Starpoint High School Tuesday afternoon following his talk with the students about making good choices. Always respected for his work on the field, Lee has now been recognized on a national level for his tireless work off it. The 11-member Football Bowl Subdivision team was announced, with Lee serving as the only member of the Mid-American Conference on the squad. In all, 22 players across all levels of college football were honored. “I’ve been involved in the community all summer and doing so much work and losing countless hours of sleep to do this,” Lee said. “To know that people recognize me and that people actually care about the things I do means a lot when you put a lot of time and energy into being a positive person. To be honored like this is a blessing.” Since 1992, the Allstate AFCA Good Works Team has honored college foot-
ball players at all levels of the sport for their selfless acts of giving back to the community and off-the-field achievements. These student-athletes represent the sport’s finest in the areas of volunteerism and leadership amongst their peers. It was fitting that Lee was presented with the award at Starpoint, as the Chester, SC native spent the spring semester mentoring at-risk students at the school twice a week. He has impacted youth of all ages, whether it was volunteering at day care centers, speaking at local schools, or reading to kids. Also in the community, Fred has spent time at the veteran’s hospital volunteered at the Ronald McDonald House, the Red Cross and with the Big Brother/Big Sister program. On campus, he has taken part in the Women’s Football 101 day, UB Kid’s Day activities, Tim Horton’s Camp Day, and the UB Early Childhood Research Center. For head coach Jeff Quinn and the football team as a whole, it was a proud day, as Lee’s embodiment of the social development pillar was recognized on a national level. The social pillar is one of Coach Quinn’s four pillars of development that he preaches to the team. “It’s a special day for our program,” Quinn said. “To have an individual in place that does all the things that we communicate with our kids in terms of becoming other-centered. That’s why I brought those four pillars. I know how much it has impacted not only the players in the program but all the kids that Freddy has had
a chance to touch in their lives. We have a living example of an individual whose work is being recognized and our players are going to be motivated to continue to reach out in the local community to do those things that Freddy has been doing for us.” “Allstate is thrilled to embark on another year of collaboration with the AFCA, and together honor this group of extraordinary young men for their “good works” in the community,” said Cynthia Whitfield, field senior vice president of Allstate’s Southern region and a member of the 2013 voting panel, in an official release. “As fans of college football, Allstate continues to be inspired by the remarkable performances that take place onthe-field, but equally inspiring are the acts of service that have earned these 22 players a spot on the 2013 AFCA Good Works Team.” Lee is the first UB football player to earn the award. He will travel to New Orleans and be honored at halftime of the Allstate Sugar Bowl on January 2, 2014.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL HUMANITARIAN AWARD WINNER PAUL PITTS III
S
an Diego State’s Humanitarian Award winner is Paul Pitts III. Pitts III has been a very active church leader within the college for the Christian Athletic Association and leads the ministry, not only with his teammates in the locker room, but with other athletic teams both on and off campus. Pitts III has spoken at SDSU Gospel Night and ONEVoice SDSU. A football Student Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) representative and scholar-athlete, Pitts II has done numerous speaking engagements within the community. He has done some engagements at local colleges to encourage student-athletes as well as on-campus events.
Pitts III has volunteered and spoken for the kids athletic combine, where he supports youth and emphasizes the importance and benefits of sports for elementary-aged kids. Although he has played in only game at San Diego State, Pitts III has been instrumental at practice and in game situations. A possession receiver with good body control, Pitts III came back from an injury the sidelined him for the entire 2012 season. Pitts III, who was a three-star recruit by ESPN.com out of Los Osos High School in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., played in the 2011 season opener against Cal Poly without making a catch.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
HISTORICAL RECAPS 2012
DEC. 15, 2012 UTAH STATE 41, TOLEDO 15 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Toledo Utah State
3 7
2
3 3
3
0 3
2009 4
9 28
FINAL 15 41
DEC. 30. 2009 IDAHO 43, BOWLING GREEN STATE 42 SCORE BY PERIOD
1
Idaho
7
Bowling Green State 14
2
0 7
3
7 14
4
21 15
FINAL 42 43
The No. 22 Utah State Aggies capitalized on a 28-point fourth quarter to top the Toledo Rockets, 41-15, to win the 2012 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. Both teams relied heavily on their kickers early in the game with Utah State earning the only touchdown in a 13-6 game after the first three quarters. Toledo kicker Jeremiah Detmer hit a field goal in the middle of the fourth-quarter, followed by three-straight touchdowns for Utah State running back Kerwynn Williams. Toledo’s Bernard Reedy narrowed the margin with an 87-yard kickoff return, but USU’s Joe Hill ran in for a touchdown in the final minutes to seal the 41-15 Aggie win. Williams was named the Most Valuable Player for Utah State, totaling 269-all-purpose yards, including three rushing touchdowns and 242-yards on the ground. Reedy garnered Toledo’s team MVP honor after totaling 309-all-purpose yards and 192-yards in kickoff returns.
Idaho’s game MVP De’Maundray Woolridge rushed for 126 yards and two touchdowns against Bowling Green. Vandal QB Nate Enderle threw for 240 yards and four touchdowns. BGSU’s game MVP Freddie Barnes caught 17 passes for 219 yards and three touchdowns. The game was tied at 14’s at the half. Idaho won the game with just four seconds left to play on an Enderle to Max Komar 18-yard touchdown pass and then successfully went for two.
ATTENDANCE: 29,243
Maryland Nevada
2011
Maryland’s Da’Rel Scott rushed for 174 yards and two second half touchdowns to help the Terrapins stay a step ahead of Nevada. The Wolf Pack’s Colin Kaepernick threw for 370 yards in Nevada’s comeback attempt. Kaepernick also threw three touchdown passes in the game. Maryland led Nevada 28-14 at half time, but Nevada outscored Maryland by one touchdown in the second half. The two teams combined for 940 total yards in the contest. Scott and Kaepernick were each named their teams’ MVP’s.
DEC. 17, 2011 OHIO 24, UTAH STATE 23 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 OHIO Utah State
0 9
2
7 0
3
10 14
4
7 0
FINAL 24 23
The Ohio University Bobcats overcame a 13-point deficit in the final seconds of the game to defeat the Utah State Aggies en route to winning the 2011 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. Utah State led 9-7 at the half before rallying to a 23-17 third quarter lead behind the rushing of Michael Smith. Smith finished the game with 157 yards and two touchdowns to earn team MVP honors. Ohio quarterback Tyler Tettleton completed 19 of 26 passes for 220 yards and two touchdowns, as well as a dive into the end zone in the final 13 seconds of the game to give Ohio the win. Although Tettleton was a key player, Ohio receiver LaVon Brazill was named the team MVP, catching eight passes for 108 yards and scoring one touchdown.
ATTENDANCE: 28,076
2010
DEC. 18. 2010 NORTHERN ILLINOIS 40, FRESNO STATE 17 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Northern Illinois Fresno State
6 7
2
17 3
3
10 0
4
7 7
FINAL 40 17
ATTENDANCE: 26,726
2008
DEC. 30, 2008 MARYLAND 42, NEVADA 35 SCORE BY PERIOD 1
13 14
2
15 0
3
0 7
4
14 14
FINAL 42 35
ATTENDANCE: 26,781
2007
DEC.31, 2007 FRESNO STATE 40, GEORGIA TECH 28 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Georgia Tech Fresno State
7 3
2
0 17
3
14 14
4
7 6
FINAL 28 40
Fresno State’s Tom Brandstater completed 23 of 30 passes for 285 yards and one touchdown and Clifton Smith rushed for 185 yards and two touchdowns as the Bulldogs tallied 571 yards of total offense en route to their second Humanitarian Bowl victory. Jonathan Dwyer led Georgia Tech with two rushing touchdowns but it wasn’t enough to overcome the 27 consecutive points scored by the Bulldogs stretching over three quarters. Brandstater and Dwyer were each named their respective teams MVP’s.
ATTENDANCE: 27,062
Northern Illinois’ Chandler Harnish was named NIU’s game MVP after turning in a 300 yard passing and 72 yard running game that collected him two rushing touchdowns, as well as a passing touchdown in the first half. Harnish threw 17 completions on 26 attempts, while also averaging 7.2 yards on 10 carries. Fresno State’s game MVP Jamel Hamler tallied 87 yards on seven carries and one touchdown. The Bulldogs were also led by Ryan Colburn who had 28 completions on 38 attempts, 288 yards passing and two touchdown passes. The two teams combined for 865 total yards in the game. Fresno State only held the lead after the first quarter, before NIU was able to outscore the Bulldogs in the second and third quarters, opening a decisive lead.
ATTENDANCE: 25,449
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
HISTORICAL RECAPS 2006
2003
DEC. 31, 2006 MIAMI 21, NEVADA 20 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Miami Nevada
2
7 2
3
7 9
4
7 3
FINAL
0 6
21 20
Miami’s Chavez Grant intercepted a Jeff Rowe pass at the Miami 33 yard line with 18 seconds left to secure a 21-20 win over Nevada in the 2006 MPC Computers Bowl. Miami Quarterback Kirby Freeman completed 11 of 19 passes for 272 yards including 2 touchdowns. Nevada’s Rowe was 20 of 31 for 192 yards. They were each named their respective teams MVP’s. Miami led Nevada 14-11 at half-time; the Wolf Pack outscored the Hurricane’s 9-7 in the 2nd half.
ATTENDANCE: 28,652
2005
DEC. 28, 2005 BOSTON COLLEGE 27, BOISE STATE 21 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Boston College Boise State
2
7 0
3
17 0
4
3 7
0 14
FINAL 27 21
Boston College’s Matthew Ryan threw three first-half touchdown passes and Ryan Glasper intercepted Boise State’s Jared Zabransky’s pass in the end zone with 37 seconds left as Boston College (9-3) held on for a 27-21 win. The Broncos (9-3) got to 27-21 with 3:51 left after Quinton Jones returned a punt 92 yards for a TD. Jones broke two tackles inside his own 10, broke two more and traversed the field for the longest punt return in the bowl’s history. Quarterbacks Ryan and Zabransky were voted by the media as MVPs for each team.
ATTENDANCE: 30,493
2004
DEC. 27, 2004 FRESNO STATE 37, VIRGINIA 34 (OT) SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Virginia Fresno State
14 7
2
7 3
3
3 7
4
7 14
OT 3 6
FINAL 34 37
Paul Pinegar completed 23 of 36 passes for 235 yards without an interception, helping the Bulldogs (9-3) erase a 21-7 second-quarter deficit and notch another win against a big-name team. He received Fresno State’s MVP honors as voted by the media. The Cavaliers (84) quarterback Marques Hagans also had a great game, throwing for 162 yards on 18-of-30 passing with one TD. He ran for 85 yards and a TD, and his team’s best play was often a drop-back pass that morphed into a long scramble. He received the media’s vote for Virginia’s MVP of the game. A crowd of 28,516 watched the game on a clear winter day in the mid-40’s.
ATTENDANCE: 28,516
JAN. 3, 2004 GEORGIA TECH 52, TULSA 10 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Georgia Tech Tulsa
7 0
2
3 3
3
21 0
4
21 7
FINAL 52 10
P.J. Daniels just about made sure Georgia Tech had a seventh straight winning season all by himself. Daniels ran for 307 yards, the second-highest total in school history, and four touchdowns to lead the Yellow Jackets to a 52-10 rout of Tulsa on a January Saturday afternoon in the Humanitarian Bowl. Tulsa (8-5) closed the regular season on a five-game winning streak for the school’s first bowl berth since 1991, but Saturday’s appearance was hardly memorable. The Golden Hurricane didn’t score a touchdown until the fourth quarter and finished with 144 total yards. Tech recovered six Tulsa fumbles, scored six touchdowns in the second half and broke the school bowl record for points set in a 45-21 win over Nebraska in the 1991 Florida Citrus Bowl. P.J. Daniels took home Georgia Tech’s MVP trophy. Tulsa’s MVP title went to Cort Moffit.
ATTENDANCE: 23,118
2002
DEC. 31, 2002 BOISE STATE 34, IOWA STATE 16 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Iowa State Boise State
3 0
2
7 7
3
0 14
4
6 13
FINAL 16 34
The Boise State defense kept the Cyclones (7-7) and in check for most of the game. Iowa State had 275 total yards on offense, and QB Seneca Wallace finished with 83 yards rushing and 107 yards passing while completing 13-of-38 passes. Dinwiddie completed 17-of-32 passes for 160 yards and a touchdown. Senior Billy Wingfield caught a game-best five catches for 64 yards. Wingfield finished the season with 1,138 yards receiving, breaking the old record of 1,101 set by Kipp Bedard in 1981. Boise State’s MVP, Bobby Hammer finished with a career-high 10 tackles, including three tackles for loss. Anthony Forrest was voted Iowa State’s MVP for the game. He had 14 tackles, one sack and one blocked punt.
ATTENDANCE: 30,446
2001
DEC. 31, 2001 CLEMSON 49, LOUISIANA TECH 24
SCORE BY PERIOD 1 Clemson Louisiana Tech
7 3
2
7 7
3
28 0
4
7 14
FINAL 49 24
With snow falling into the 3rd quarter, both warm-weather teams made the best of a cold situation. The game was close through the first half, with Clemson pulling away on a 28 point run in the 3rd quarter. Clemson’s senior quarterback and Most Valuable Player, Woodrow Dantzler, completed 15 of 23 passes for 218 yards. He ran 15 times for 57 yards before leaving with the Tigers ahead 42-10 after the third quarter. Delwyn Daigre earned Louisiana Tech’s Most Valuable Player award with 178 yards on 10 receptions and 1 TD.
ATTENDANCE: 23,472
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
HISTORICAL RECAPS 2000
1998
DEC. 28, 2000 BOISE STATE 38, UTEP 23 SCORE BY PERIOD 1 UTEP Boise State
0 7
2
3
10 10
3 7
4
FINAL
10 14
23 38
DEC. 30, 1998 IDAHO 42, SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI 35 SCORE BY PERIOD 1
Southern Mississippi 13
Idaho
7
2
8 21
3
0 7
4
14 7
FINAL 35 42
Returning to defend their 1999 Humanitarian Bowl victory, Boise State succeeded in overcoming future WAC opponent Texas-El Paso. Boise State’s senior quarterback Bart Hendricks earned bowl Most Valuable Player honors, scoring three touchdowns and throwing for a fourth leading Boise State to its second consecutive Humanitarian Bowl win, 38-23 over Texas-El Paso in front of 26,203 fans at Bronco Stadium. UTEP’s junior tailback Chris Porter ended the game with a career high 134 rushing yards in earning UTEP’s bowl MVP honor.
The Idaho Vandals stunned Southern Mississippi in 1998 after taking a surprise 28-21 half-time lead and battling through the Golden Eagles’ rally attempts to hold onto the victory. Idaho quarterback John Welsh passed for four touchdowns in the game. Welsh was named the MVP for the game for Idaho. Southern Mississippi’s MVP award went to Lee Roberts.
ATTENDANCE: 26,203
1997
ATTENDANCE: 19,664
1999
DEC. 29, 1997 CINCINNATI 35, UTAH STATE 19
SCORE BY PERIOD 1
Cincinnati Utah State
SCORE BY PERIOD 1
DEC. 30, 1999 BOISE STATE 34, LOUISVILLE 31 Louisville Boise State
17 14
2
3
7 7
4
0 6
FINAL
7 7
31 34
The game featured 10 lead changes, 31 first-quarter points, 29,283 screaming fans, and ESPN2’s largest viewing audience of the bowl season. The two teams heated up the holiday air with 956 offensive yards and 54 first downs. Boise State’s MVP of the game was runningback and redshirt freshman Brock Forsey who rushed for 152 yards and had a school record 269 all-purpose yards. Louisville’s MVP honor went to its quarterback, Chris Redman, who threw for 314 yards and two touchdowns.
7 0
2
14 0
3
14 13
4
0 6
FINAL 35 19
Cincinnati was too powerful for Utah State in the inaugural game, out-gaining Utah State 225-63 in rushing yardage, as well as in return yardage with a 129-26 difference. The Bearcats controlled the game from the start with a 21-0 lead by the beginning of the second half. Bearcat quarterback Chad Plummer took Cincinnati game MVP honors with 53 yards rushing, 62 yards passing and 64 yards in receiving. The MVP for Utah State was Steve Smith.
ATTENDANCE: 16,131
ATTENDANCE: 29,283
Famous Idaho Potato Bowl GAME HISTORY
DATE TEAMS Humanitarian Bowl 12/29/97 12/30/98 12/30/99 12/28/00 12/31/01 12/31/02 1/3/04
ATTENDANCE NETWORK RATINGS
Cincinnati 35, Utah State 19 Idaho 42, Southern Mississippi 35 Boise State 34, Louisville 31 Boise State 38, UTEP 23 Clemson 49, Louisiana Tech 24 Boise State 34, Iowa State 16 Georgia Tech 52, Tulsa 10
MPC Computers Bowl
12/27/04 Fresno State 37, Virginia 34 (OT) 12/28/05 Boston College 27, Boise State 21 12/31/06 Miami 21, Nevada 20
Roady’s Humanitarian Bowl
12/31/07 Fresno State 40, Georgia Tech 28 12/30/08 Maryland 42, Nevada 35 12/30/09 Idaho 43, Bowling Green 42
uDrove Humanitarian Bowl
12/18/10 Northern Illinois 40, Fresno State 17
Famous Idaho Potato Bowl 12/17/11 Ohio 24, Utah State 23 12/15/12 Utah State 41, Toledo 15
16,131 19,664 29,283 26,203 23,472 30,446 23,118
ESPN-2 ESPN-2 ESPN-2 ESPN-2 ESPN ESPN ESPN
0.77 1.1 1.6 1.1 2.04 1.83 2.09
28, 516 30,493 28,652
ESPN ESPN ESPN
1.7 2.33 1.63
27,062 26,781 26,726
ESPN-2 ESPN-2 ESPN
0.77 2.40 2.39
25,449
ESPN/ESPN3.com
1.8
28,076 29,243
ESPN/ESPN3 ESPN/ESPN3
1.7 2.13
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A CHILD’S WISH IS WAITING. YOU CAN HELP MAKE IT COME TRUE. Every 40 minutes, the Make-A-Wish Foundation® grants the wish of a child with a life-threatening medical condition — being a veterinarian for a day, meeting a favorite entertainer or going anywhere their imagination takes them. You can help make wishes happen. Visit wish.org today.
2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
By: Tom Scott
I
t was early 1997, and the Big West Conference was without a guaranteed bowl game for its football champion. With Las Vegas having essentially become a Western Athletic Conference city the year before with the move of UNLV to the WAC, the bowl had elected to follow suit and switch its affiliation from the Big West to the Rebels’ new league to maintain local interest in the event. Were there any volunteers to come to the aid of the Big West? Boise State athletic director Gene Bleymaier raised his hand. What about creating a unique bowl game at a cold-weather site, one that had embraced football at all levels for decades? The idea germinated with the support of Big West commissioner Dennis Farrell, and on June 12, 1997, the new bowl received official certification from the NCAA. The event would be named the Humanitarian Bowl in a partnership with Boise’s World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame. The initial agreement paired the Big West champion with a representative from Conference USA. In a day of fewer bowls and more flexible selection processes, there was competition for the C-USA berth. Cincinnati, with a promise of healthy ticket sales and a future visit to
Boise State by its nationally-ranked men’s basketball team, earned the bid opposite Utah State. The inaugural Humanitarian Bowl was played on December 29, 1997, in front of 16,289 fans on Bronco Stadium’s blue turf. It was considered a good crowd at the time, given USU coach John L. Smith’s lame-duck status. Smith was on his way to Louisville, and the Aggies’ fan base was less than motivated. Cincinnati was inspired, though, and the Bearcats took home a 35-19 victory. The 1998 Humanitarian Bowl pitted Idaho against Southern Miss and provided a glimpse into the bowl’s high-scoring future. The Vandals and Golden Eagles put on an of-
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
fensive show before Idaho prevailed, 42-35. With a title sponsor aboard for the first time, Boise State made its first-ever bowl game in the 1999 Crucial.com Humanitarian Bowl, another back-and-forth affair that saw the Broncos squeeze out a 34-31 win over the John L. Smith-coached Cardinals. In 2000, the final season of Big West football, the Crucial.com Humanitarian Bowl transitioned to a Western Athletic Conference opponent. Boise State returned as Big West champion and, in Dirk Koetter’s final game as Broncos coach, topped UTEP 38-23. An eight-year association with the Atlantic Coast Conference began in 2001, when Tommy Bowden’s Clemson Tigers rolled up a 49-24 victory over WAC winner Louisiana Tech. The 2002 Crucial.com Humanitarian Bowl marked the return of Boise State, which wrapped up a 12-1 season with a 34-16 triumph over Seneca Wallace and Iowa State, filling the bowl’s ACC slot. The Broncos’ Brock Forsey notched three touchdowns to finish his senior year as the nation’s leading scorer. The 2003 game was actually played January 3, 2004, sandwiched in between BCS bowl games. Georgia Tech’s P.J. Daniels rushed for a bowl record 307 yards in a 52-10 conquest of Tulsa. The game secured a new title sponsor in 2004 and was renamed the MPC Computers Bowl. Under that moniker, the bowl went 3-for-3 in thrillers, beginning with the first overtime in the game’s history as Fresno State edged Virginia, 37-34. In 2005, Matt Ryan and Boston College scored the
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
first 27 points of the game before holding off Boise State, 27-21, a year before the Broncos’ famous Fiesta Bowl win over Oklahoma. The 2006 MPC Computers Bowl brought Nevada to the blue turf to play Miami in Larry Coker’s final game as head coach of the Hurricanes. And again, the ‘Canes had to fend off a last-minute Wolf Pack surge to prevail, 21-20. In 2007, the bowl returned to its roots with a new sponsor, Roady’s Truck Stops, and the Roady’s Humanitarian Bowl saw Fresno State beat Georgia Tech, 40-28. Nevada was back in the game in 2008, but Maryland repelled a Colin Kaepernick-led comeback by the Wolf Pack and won, 42-35. The 2009 Roady’s Humanitarian Bowl was one for the ages. Idaho and Bowling Green, the first Mid-American Conference representative to play in the game, took turns putting the pedal to the metal. Through a flurry of momentum shifts, the Falcons took a 4235 lead with 32 seconds remaining in the game. But the Vandals drove 66 yards in three plays and scored with four seconds left. Idaho decided to go for two points, and Nate Enderle converted with a pass to Preston Davis to win it, 43-42. A sister company of Roady’s, uDrove, took ti-
tle sponsorship in 2010, when Northern Illinois handed Fresno State a 40-17 setback. Then a funny thing happened on the way to the 2011 game. The Idaho Potato Commission emerged with a commitment as a long-term sponsor, giving the bowl its new identity, the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. Hear the name, and you know exactly what it is and where it is. And what it was in 2011 was a classic. Utah State led the entire way—until Ohio quarterback Tyler Tettleton scored with 13 seconds remaining to give the Bobcats their first bowl victory ever. The 2012 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl marked the end of an era—the final game of a 13-year association with the WAC, capping the final season of WAC football. And Utah State, the conference’s final champion, picked up its first postseason victory in 19 years, exploding past Toledo 41-15 with four touchdowns in the final 7½ minutes of the game. The Aggies’ Kerwynn Williams rushed for 235 yards, a whopping 191 of them in the fourth quarter. Today, the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl is the longest-running cold weather bowl game in college football. It has hosted 23 different universities and has seen 18 first-round NFL Draft picks come through. The Famous Idaho Potato Bowl is a celebration of the spirit of winter in the beautiful Idaho mountains. That includes football. And potatoes.
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
300-YARD PASSING GAMES
100-YARD RUSHING GAMES
1. 387 Tyler Sheehan, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2. 370 Colin Kaepernick, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
1. 307 P.J. Daniels, Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
3. 342 Lee Roberts, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho) 1998
2. 235 Kerwynn Williams, Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
4. 335 Bart Hendricks, Boise State (vs. Louisville)
1999
3. 174 Da’Rel Scott, Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
5. 328 Luke McCown, Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
4. 157 Michael Smith, Utah State (vs. Ohio)
2011
6. 314 Chris Redman, Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
5. 152 Clifton Smith, Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech) 2007 152 Brock Forsey, Boise State (vs. Louisville) 7. 134 Chris Porter, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
7. 300 Chandler Harnish, Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State) 2010
1999 2000
PASSING ATTEMPTS 1. 52
Luke McCown, Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2004
2. 51
Lee Roberts, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho) 1998
10. 122 Derrick Nix, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
3. 47
Tyler Sheehan, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
11. 111 Frank Moreau, Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
47
Colin Kaepernick, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
12. 101 Robert Turbin, Utah State (vs. Ohio)
2011
47
Chris Redman, Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
101 Vai Taua, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
8. 126 DeMaundray Woolridge, Idaho (vs. Bowling Green) 2009 126 Wendell Mathis, Fresno State (vs. Virginia)
101 Bernard Rambert, Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech) 2001
RUSHING ATTEMPTS 1. 31
P.J. Daniels, Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
2. 29
Derrick Nix, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
3. 26
Chris Porter, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
2001
PASS COMPLETIONS 1. 33
Tyler Sheehan, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2. 30
Lee Roberts, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho) 1998
3. 28
Ryan Colburn, Fresno State (vs. Northern Illinois) 2010
PASS PERCENTAGE (minimum 15 att) 1. .767 (23-30) Tom Brandstater, Fresno St. (vs. Ga Tech) 2007 2. .737 (28-38) Ryan Colburn, Fresno St. (vs. N. Illinois) 2010
AVERAGE YARDS PER CARRY (minimum 10 att) 1. 13.08 (12-157) Michael Smith, Utah State (vs. Ohio)
2011
3. .731 (19-26) Mickey Tettleton, Ohio (vs. Utah State) 2011
13.06 (18-235) Kerwynn Williams, Utah State (vs. Toledo) 2012 3. 12.4 (14-174) Da’Rel Scott, Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
PASSES HAD INTERCEPTED 1. 3
RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS 1. 4
P.J. Daniels, Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
2. 3
Kerwynn Williams, Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
3
Brock Forsey, Boise State (vs. Iowa State)
2002
3
Derrick Nix, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
Luke McCown, Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
3
Chris Redman, Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
3
Matt Sauk, Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
IMAGE
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK PASSING TOUCHDOWNS
RECEPTIONS
1. 5
Paul Pinegar, Fresno State (vs. Virginia)
2004
1. 17
Freddie Barnes, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2. 4
Nathan Enderle, Idaho (vs. Bowling Green)
2009
2. 13
Mike McCoy, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
4
Tyler Sheehan, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
3. 12
Sherrod Gideon, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho) 1998
4
Woody Dantzler, Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech) 2001
4
John Welsh, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi) 1998
YARDS PER RECEPTION (minimum 5 rec) 1. 28.8 (5-144) Will Blackmon, Boston Coll. (vs. Boise St.) 2005 2. 26.0 (5-130) Marko Mitchell, Nevada (vs. Maryland) 2008
TOTAL OFFENSE 1. 412 Tyler Sheehan, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2. 385 Colin Kaepernick, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
3. 372 Chandler Harnish, Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State) 2010
TOUCHDOWNS RESPONSIBLE FOR
3. 17.8 (10-178) Delwyn Daigre, La. Tech (vs. Clemson) 2001
RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS 1. 3
Freddie Barnes, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2. 2
Tony Gonzalez, Boston College (vs. Boise State) 2005
1. 5
Paul Pinegar, Fresno State (vs. Virginia)
2004
2
Sherrod Gideon, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho) 1998
2. 4
Tyler Sheehan, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2
Cornelius Bonner, Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
4
Nathan Enderle, Idaho (vs. Bowling Green)
2009
4
Colin Kaepernick, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
ALL-PURPOSE YARDS
4
P.J. Daniels, Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
1. 307 P.J. Daniels, Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
4
Woody Dantzler, Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech) 2001
2. 269 Kerwynn Williams, Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
4
Bart Hendricks, Boise State (vs. UTEP)
4
John Welsh, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi) 1998
2000
269 Brock Forsey, Boise State (vs. Louisville)
1997
1999
PUNT AVERAGE 100-YARD RECEIVING GAMES
1. 50.0 (6-300)
Paul Hershey, Ohio (vs. Utah State)
2011 2000
1. 219 Freddie Barnes, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2. 48.8 (5-244)
Glen Beard, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2. 178 Delwyn Daigre, Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
3. 45.0 (7-315)
Cort Moffitt, Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech) #2003
3. 172 Mike McCoy, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
4. 144 Will Blackmon, Boston College (vs. Boise State) 2005
PUNTS
5. 136 Steve Smith, Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
1. 8
6. 130 Marko Mitchell, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
7. 119 Preston Davis, Idaho (vs. Bowling Green)
2009
Travis Baltz, Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
8
Brett Jaekle, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
8
Johnny Ayers, Boston College vs. Boise State) 2005
8. 117 Sherrod Gideon, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho) 1998
IMAGE
9. 109 Arnold Jackson, Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
YARDS PER KICKOFF RETURN (minimum 4 att)
10. 108 LaVon Brazill, Ohio (vs. Utah State)
2011
1. 33.8 (5-169)
Zek Parker, Louisville (vs. Boise State) 1999
11. 101 Sam Shields, Miami (vs. Nevada)
2006
33.8 (5-169)
Jerome Thomas, Idaho (vs. S. Mississippi)1998
101 Tod Pinkston, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho) 1998
3. 32.0 (6-192)
Bernard Reedy, Toledo (vs. Utah State) 2012
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK KICKOFF RETURN YARDS
FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS
1. 192 Bernard Reedy, Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
1. 4
Brett Jaekle, Nevada (vs. Miami)
2006
2. 169 Zek Parker, Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
4
Nick Calaycay, Boise State (vs. Louisville)
1999
169 Jerome Thomas, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi) 1998
3. 3
Jeremiah Detmer, Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
Ricky Bishop, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
3
KICKOFF RETURNS 1. 6
Bernard Reedy, Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
INTERCEPTIONS
6
Jamaal Evans, Georgia Tech (vs. Fresno State) 2007
1. 2
3. 5
Isaiah Burse, Fresno State (vs. Northern Illinois) 2010
2
5
Brandon Fragger, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
5
Zek Parker, Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
5
Jerome Thomas, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi) 1998
YARDS PER PUNT RETURN (minimum 4 att)
Ryan Glasper, Boston College (vs. Boise State) 2005 Brad Jackson, Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
TACKLES 1. 20
Ryan Skinner, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi) 1998
2. 15
Korey Hall, Boise State (vs. Boston College)
2005
3. 14
Anthony Forrest, Iowa State (vs. Boise State)
2002
Shawn Sandoval, Boise State (vs. UTEP)
2000
1. 21.6 (7-151) Quinton Jones, Boise St. (vs. Boston Col.) 2005
14
2. 18.2 (5-91) Javier Sanchez, UTEP (vs. Boise State) 2000 3. 16.3 (4-65) Tinker Keck, Cincinnati (vs. Utah State) 1997
SACKS 1. 3
Jake Coffman, Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State) 2010
PUNT RETURN YARDS
3
Jeff Copp, Boise State (vs. UTEP)
2000
1. 151 Quinton Jones, Boise State (vs. Boston College) 2005
3
Menson Holloway, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
2. 91
Javier Sanchez, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
3. 65
Tinker Keck, Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
FUMBLE RECOVERIES 1. 2
PUNT RETURNS
2
Joe Anoai, Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
Wil Beck, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
1. 7
Quinton Jones, Boise State (vs. Boston College) 2005
2. 6
Tony Logan, Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
POINTS
3. 5
Tim Gilligan, Boise State (vs. Iowa State)
2002
1. 24
P.J. Daniels, Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
Javier Sanchez, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
2. 18
Kerwynn Williams, Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
18
Freddie Barnes, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
18
Brock Forsey, Boise State (vs. Iowa State)
2002
5
FIELD GOALS 1. 4
Brett Jaekle, Nevada (vs. Miami)
2006
18
IMAGE Bart Hendricks, Boise State (vs. UTEP)
2000
2. 3
Jeremiah Detmer, Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
18
Derrick Nix, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
Ricky Bishop, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
3
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK TOUCHDOWNS
PUNT
1. 4
P.J. Daniels, Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
1. 63
Glen Beard, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
2. 3
Kerwynn Williams, Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
2. 62
Mike Lingua, Fresno State (vs. Virginia)
2004
3
Freddie Barnes, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
3. 59
Paul Hershey, Ohio (vs. Utah State)
2011
3
Brock Forsey, Boise State (vs. Iowa State)
2002
3
Bart Hendricks, Boise State (vs. UTEP)
2000
PUNT RETURN
3
Derrick Nix, Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
1. 92* Quinton Jones, Boise State (vs. Boston College) 2005
POINTS AFTER TOUCHDOWN
2. 50
Vern Benard, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi) 1998
3. 36
Tim Gilligan, Boise State (vs. Iowa State)
1. 7
Aaron Hunt, Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
2. 6
Matt Norsic, Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
KICKOFF RETURN
Ben Davis, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
1. 99* Torrey Smith, Maryland (vs. Nevada)
6
2002
2008
2. 98* Jerome Thomas, Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi) 1998
LONG PLAYS
3. 91* Zek Parker, Louisville (vs. Boise State)
RUSH
FIELD GOAL
1999
1. 77* Bart Hendricks, Boise State (vs. UTEP)
2000
1. 51
Michael Cklamovski, Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno St.) 2010
2. 63* Kerwynn Williams, Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
2. 49
Brent Visintainer, Fresno State (vs. Virginia)
2004
2011
3. 47
Ricky Bishop, UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
63* Michael Smith, Utah State (vs. Ohio)
* scoring play
PASS 1. 78
Kirby Freeman to Sam Shields, Miami (vs. Nevada) 2006
2. 75* Matt Sauk to Steve Smith, Utah St. (vs. Cincinnati) 1997 3. 68
TEAM RECORDS HIGHS
Colin Kaepernick to Marko Mitchell, Nev (vs. Mary) 2008
TOTAL OFFENSE
INTERCEPTION
1. 582 Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
1. 80* Shaunard Harts, Boise State (vs. Louisville)
1999
2. 571 Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
2. 59
Tinker Keck, Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
3. 548 Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
3. 33
Jonathon Amaya, Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
TOTAL OFFENSIVE PLAYS
FUMBLE RETURN 1. 55
Ray Henderson, Boston College (vs. Boise State) 2005
2. 10* Brent Passey, Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
IMAGE
1. 92
Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
2. 90
Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
3. 85
Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK YARDS PER PLAY
6
Idaho (vs. Bowling Green)
2009
1. 9.4
Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
6
Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
2. 9.2
Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
6
Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
3. 9.1
Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State)
2010
PASSING YARDS POINTS
1. 401 Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
(Game)
2. 388 Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
3. 370 Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
1. 52
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
2. 49
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
3. 43
Idaho (vs. Bowling Green)
2009
(FIRST HALF) 1. 28 28
Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
PASSING ATTEMPTS 1. 59
Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
2. 52
Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
3. 49
Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
PASS COMPLETIONS (SECOND HALF) 1. 42
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
1. 34
Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2. 31
Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
3. 29
Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
(FIRST QUARTER) 1. 17
Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
(SECOND QUARTER) 1. 21
Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
(THIRD QUARTER) 1. 28
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
PASS PERCENTAGE 1. .755 (23-31)Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
2. .737 (28-38)
Fresno State (vs. Northern Illinois)
2010
3. .731 (19-26)
Ohio (vs. Utah State)
2011
PASSING TOUCHDOWNS 2001
1. 5
Fresno State (vs. Virginia)
2004
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
3. 4
Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
4
Idaho (vs. Bowling Green)
2009
4
Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
5
(FOURTH QUARTER) 1. 28
Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
(See end of section for combined points)
IMAGE TOUCHDOWNS 1. 7 7 3. 6
RUSHING YARDS
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
1. 371 Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
2. 353 Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
3. 345 Utah State (vs. Ohio)
2011
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK RUSHING ATTEMPTS
PUNTS
1. 65
Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
1. 8
Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
2. 55
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
8
Nevada (vs. Maryland)
2008
3. 54
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
8
Boston College (vs. Boise State)
2005
8
Boise State (vs. Iowa State)
2002
YARDS PER CARRY 1. 11.4 (31-353) Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
KICKOFF RETURNS
2. 7.3
(28-203) Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State)
2010
1. 7
3. 7.2
(36-260) Virginia (vs. Fresno State)
2004
RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS
Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
7
Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
7
Idaho (vs. Bowling Green)
2009
7
Georgia Tech (vs. Fresno State)
2007
1. 7
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
7
Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
2. 5
Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
7
Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
3. 4
Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State)
2010
Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
4
INTERCEPTIONS BY 1. 3
FIRST DOWNS
Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
3
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
1. 29
Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
3
Boise State (vs. Louisville)
1999
2. 28
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
3
Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
Boise State (vs. Louisville)
1999
28
FUMBLES RECOVERED BY THIRD DOWN CONVERSIONS
1. 6
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
1. 73% (8-11)
Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
2. 5
Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
2. 64% (14-22)
Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
3. 3
Southern Mississippi (vs. Idaho)
1998
2. 63% (10-16)
Georgia Tech (vs. Fresno State)
2007
TURNOVERS FORCED (INT/FUM) TIME OF POSSESSION
1. 6
(0/6)
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
1. 42:17 Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
2. 5
(0/5)
Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
2. 35.55 Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
3. 4
(3/1)
Maryland (vs. Nevada)
2008
3. 35:53 Fresno State (vs. Northern Illinois)
2010
4
(3/1)
Cincinnati (vs. Utah State)
1997
IMAGE LONGEST DRIVE 1. 91
(9)
Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
2. 90
(10)
Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
(8)
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
90
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK SACKS BY 1. 7
POINTS
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
1. 10
Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
2. 15
Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State)
2010
3. 16
Iowa State (vs. Boise State)
2002
6
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
(See end of section for combined points)
6
Idaho (vs. Southern Mississippi)
1998
7 3. 6
TOUCHDOWNS PENALTIES
1. 1
Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
1. 14
Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
1
Nevada (vs. Miami)
2006
2. 11
Boston College (vs. Boise State)
2005
1
Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
3. 10
Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
Virginia (vs. Fresno State)
2004
10
PENALTY YARDS
PASSING YARDS 1. 19
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
2. 96
Utah State (vs. Ohio)
2011
3. 130 Iowa State (vs. Boise State)
2002
1. 120 Louisville (vs. Boise State)
1999
2. 94
Boston College (vs. Boise State)
2005
PASSING ATTEMPTS
3. 89
Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
1. 13
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
2. 19
Utah State (vs. Ohio)
2011
Miami (vs. Nevada)
2006
19
LOWS
PASS COMPLETIONS
TOTAL OFFENSE 1. 144 Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
1. 7
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
2. 275 Iowa State (vs. Boise State)
2002
2. 11
Miami (vs. Nevada)
2006
3. 297 Nevada (vs. Miami)
2006
3. 12
Utah State (vs. Ohio)
2011
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
12
TOTAL OFFENSIVE PLAYS 1. 50 50 3. 53
Miami (vs. Nevada)
2006
PASS PERCENTAGE
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
1. .357 (15-42)
Iowa State (vs. Boise State)
2002
Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
2. .400 (12-30)
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
3. .447 (17-38)
UTEP (vs. BoiseIMAGE State)
2000
YARDS PER PLAY 1. 2.7
Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
2. 3.3
Iowa State (vs. Boise State)
2002
3. 3.9
UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000 | 118 |
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK PASSING TOUCHDOWNS
THIRD DOWN CONVERSIONS
1. 0
Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
1. 18% (2-11)
0
Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
18% (2-11)
0
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
RUSHING YARDS
3. 20% (2-10)
Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
Boise State (vs. UTEP)
2000
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
TIME OF POSSESSION
1. -56 Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
1. 17:43 Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
2. 28
Miami (vs. Nevada)
2006
2. 24:05 Utah State (vs. Toledo)
2012
3. 43
Boise State (vs. Boston College)
2005
3. 24:07 Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State)
2010
RUSHING ATTEMPTS
PUNTS
1. 20
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
1. 0
Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State)
2010
2. 24
Bowling Green (vs. Idaho)
2009
2. 2
Fresno State (vs. Georgia Tech)
2007
2. 26
Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
Boise State (vs. Louisville)
1999
Louisiana Tech (vs. Clemson)
2001
26
2
KICKOFF RETURNS YARDS PER CARRY
1. 2
1. -2.2 (26- -56) Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
2. 0.9
(31-28)
Miami (vs. Nevada)
2006
3. 1.6
(27-43)
Boise State (vs. Boston College)
2005
2 3. 3
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
9 Times – Most Recent: N. Illinois (vs. Fresno St.) 2010
FEWEST TURNOVERS RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS 1. 0
1. 0
Ohio (vs. Utah State)
2011
Toledo (vs. Utah State)
2012
0
Northern Illinois (vs. Fresno State)
2010
0
Fresno State (vs. Northern Illinois)
2010
0
Fresno State (vs. Virginia)
2004
0
Nevada (vs. Miami)
2006
0
Virginia (vs. Fresno State)
2004
0
Fresno State (vs. Virginia)
2004
0
Boise State (vs. Iowa State)
2002
0
Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
PENALTIES FIRST DOWNS
1. 1
Nevada (vs. Miami)
2006 1997
1. 10
Tulsa (vs. Georgia Tech)
#2003
2. 3
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
2. 13
Miami (vs. Nevada)
2007
3. 4
Utah State (vs. Ohio)
3. 15
Georgia Tech (vs. Tulsa)
#2003
4
Fresno State (vs. Northern Illinois)
2010
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
4
UTEP (vs. Boise State)
2000
15
IMAGE
2011
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
RECORD BOOK FEWEST COMBINED POINTS
PENALTY YARDS 1. 10
Nevada (vs. Miami)
2006
(Game)
2. 13
Utah State (vs. Cincinnati)
1997
1. 41
Miami 21, Nevada 20
2006
3. 34
Boise State (vs. Iowa State)
2002
2. 47
Ohio 24, Utah State 23
2011
Clemson (vs. Louisiana Tech)
2001
3. 48
Boston College 27, Boise State 21
2005
34
MOST COMBINED POINTS
(FIRST HALF)
(Game)
1. 13
Georgia Tech 10, Tulsa 3
1. 85
Idaho 43, Bowling Green 42
2009
2. 77
Maryland 42, Nevada 35
2008
(SECOND HALF)
Idaho 42, Southern Mississippi 35
1998
1. 16
77
(FIRST HALF) 1. 49
Idaho 28, Southern Mississippi 21
Idaho 29, Bowling Green 28
2006
(FIRST QUARTER) 1998
(SECOND HALF) 1. 57
Nevada 9, Miami 7
#2003
1. 3
Iowa State 3, Boise State 0
2002
(SECOND QUARTER) 2009
1. 6 6
Toledo 3, Utah State 3
2012
Georgia Tech 3, Tulsa 3
#2003
(FIRST QUARTER) 1. 31
Louisville 17, Boise State 14
1999
(THIRD QUARTER) 1. 3
Utah State 3, Toledo 0
2012
(SECOND QUARTER) 1. 29
Idaho 21, Southern Mississippi 8
1998
(FOURTH QUARTER) 1. 6 6
(THIRD QUARTER) 1. 28 28
Fresno State 14, Georgia Tech 14
2007
Clemson 28, Louisiana Tech 0
2001
(FOURTH QUARTER) 1. 36
Bowling Green 21, Idaho 15
2009
Nevada 6, Miami 0
2006
Utah State 6, Cincinnati 0
1997
ATTENDANCE 1. 30,493
Boston College vs. Boise State
2005
2. 30,446
Iowa State vs. Boise State
2002
3. 29,283
Louisville vs. Boise State
1999
IMAGE
# - game played January 3, 2004, representing 2003 season.
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AC_IPB_ProgamAd.indd 1
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO FOOTBALL STATS Rushing
OLIVER, Branden TAYLOR, Anthone POTTS, James ZORDICH, Alex MURIE, Brandon CAMPBELL, Devin ROSS, Boise DANIEL, Tony LEE, Fred DENNISON, Alex NEUTZ, Alex WAY, Colby TEAM LICATA, Joe Total Opponents Passing
gp
att
gain loss
gp
effic comp-att-int
LICATA, Joe ZORDICH, Alex DANIEL, Tony TEAM SCHRECK, Mason Total Opponents
12 5 4 11 12 12 12
NEUTZ, Alex LEE, Fred OLIVER, Branden CAMPBELL, Devin SCHRECK, Mason ROSS, Boise WEISER, Matt GORDON, Jimmy HUGHES, Devon TAYLOR, Anthone DENNISON, Alex WILLOUGHBY, Ron DUNMORE, John ROBINSON, Malco DIXON, Cordero POTTS, James Total Opponents
12 58 947 12 54 644 11 22 151 11 19 200 12 16 126 8 13 156 12 13 154 12 8 86 10 7 91 8 7 45 11 4 34 10 3 83 8 3 30 3 1 8 3 1 6 9 1 -2 12 230 2759 12 182 2599
Receiving
Field Goals
CLARKE, Patrick Scoring
OLIVER, Branden CLARKE, Patrick NEUTZ, Alex LEE, Fred CAMPBELL, Devin TAYLOR, Anthone SCHRECK, Mason MACK, Khalil HUGHES, Devon HOUSTON, Okoye DENNISON, Alex GORDON, Jimmy WEISER, Matt LICATA, Joe JOHNSON, Najja TEAM Total Opponents Score by Quarters Buffalo Opponents
net avg
td
gp
fg
no.
yds
avg
pct. 01-19
fg
15 - 12-19 11 4 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 48 12-19 33 12-18 1st
3-3
42-45 42-45 30-30 2nd
td
11 4 0 0 2 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 22 13
20-29
kick
3rd
56 110 103 78 74 42
yds
60 129.2 32 48.1 20 22.3 13 15.2 21 2.8 11 1.9 10 1.8 11 1.2 2 0.2 0 0.0 0 -0.1 0 -0.2 0 -3.7 16 -4.1 60 171.9 75 159.8 td
lg avg/g
59.1 2628 21 41.7 66 0 57.1 42 1 0.0 0 0 50.0 23 0 58.1 2759 22 52.0 2599 13
16.3 11.9 6.9 10.5 7.9 12.0 11.8 10.8 13.0 6.4 8.5 27.7 10.0 8.0 6.0 -2.0 12.0 14.3
12-19 63.2 1-1 td
pct
133.35 220-372-7 87.87 5-12-0 154.69 4-7-0 0.00 0-3-0 146.60 1-2-0 131.40 230-396-7 118.06 182-350-15
62 219.0 45 13.2 17 10.5 0 0.0 23 1.9 62 229.9 83 216.6
lg avg/g
62 78.9 36 53.7 14 13.7 30 18.2 19 10.5 37 19.5 34 12.8 36 7.2 30 9.1 11 5.6 19 3.1 45 8.3 14 3.8 8 2.7 6 2.0 0 -0.2 62 229.9 83 216.6
30-39
3-5
40-49
3-8
Interceptions
4th
85 61
no.
MACK, Khalil JOHNSON, Najja LESTER, Cortney STRIGGLES, Dwel BAKER, Marqus SHERRY, Witney SKINNER, Lee GILBO, Nick STOCKMAN, Jake
3 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 1
Punting
lg blk
50-99
2-2
51
PAT rush rcv pass dxp saf
1-1
Record: Overall All games 8-4 Conference 6-2 Non-Conference 2-2 Team Statistics FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty RUSHING YARDAGE Rushing Attempts Average Per Rush Average Per Game TDs Rushing PASSING YARDAGE Comp-Att-Int Average Per Pass Average Per Catch Average Per Game TDs Passing TOTAL OFFENSE Average Per Play Average Per Game KICK RETURNS: #-Yards PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards INT RETURNS: #-Yards FUMBLES-LOST PENALTIES-Yards PUNTS-AVG TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 3RD-DOWN Conversions 4TH-DOWN Conversions
lg avg/g
11 282 1485 64 1421 5.0 15 8 77 398 13 385 5.0 3 9 58 222 21 201 3.5 0 5 13 78 2 76 5.8 0 11 7 34 3 31 4.4 0 11 11 27 6 21 1.9 2 8 2 14 0 14 7.0 0 4 4 16 11 5 1.2 0 12 1 2 0 2 2.0 0 11 1 0 0 0 0.0 0 12 1 0 1 -1 -1.0 0 11 1 0 2 -2 -2.0 0 11 13 0 41 -41 -3.2 0 12 29 40 89 -49 -1.7 1 12 500 2316 253 2063 4.1 21 12 468 2297 380 1917 4.1 19
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 0-2 - - - 0-2 1 1-2 OT Total 16 370 13 268
0
pts
- 90 - 78 - 66 - 24 - 18 - 18 - 12 - 12 - 12 1 8 6 6 6 6 6 1 2 2 370 - 268
5 4 9 22
Kick Returns
Total Offense
LICATA, Joe OLIVER, Branden TAYLOR, Anthone POTTS, James ZORDICH, Alex Total Opponents
(as of Dec 11, 2013)
no.
CAMPBELL, Devin NEUTZ, Alex Total Opponents
OLIVER, Brande NEUTZ, Alex CAMPBELL, Dev LEE, Fred TAYLOR, Anthon Total Opponents
yds avg
125 39 38 9 4 0 2 0 5
41.7 13.0 12.7 9.0 4.0 0.0 2.0 0.0 5.0
lg
68 2728 40.1 64 1 9 9.0 9
Punt Returns
All Purpose
Away Neutral 3-3 0-0 3-1 0-0 0-2 0-0 UB OPP 256 224 112 96 122 109 22 19 2063 1917 500 468 4.1 4.1 171.9 159.8 21 19 2759 2599 230-396-7 182-350-15 7.0 7.4 12.0 14.3 229.9 216.6 22 13 4822 4516 5.4 5.5 401.8 376.3 43-959 49-894 9-52 22-168 15-222 7-49 11-5 19-13 69-744 77-683 69-39.7 67-40.2 31:52 28:08 76/187 56/167 7/15 4/15
no. yds avg
GRASSMAN, Tyler CLARKE, Patrick
CAMPBELL, Devin ROSS, Boise HOUSTON, Okoye GORDON, Jimmy FINK, Waylon NEUTZ, Alex WEISER, Matt Total Opponents
Home 5-1 3-1 2-0
no.
g
28 5 5 2 1 1 1 43 49
rush
td
tb
yds avg
td
yds avg
td
24 28 52 168 669 122 97 27 17 19 8 959 894
rcv
4.8 7.0 5.8 7.6
23.9 24.4 19.4 13.5 17.0 19.0 8.0 22.3 18.2 pr
lg
2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
45 33 22 9 4 0 2 0 5
fc i20 50+ blk
3 15 25 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
kr
lg
7 0
0 0
19 22 22 21
lg
96 38 30 14 17 19 8 96 51
ir
total avg/g
11 1421 151 0 0 0 1572 142.9 12 -1 947 28 19 0 993 82.8 11 21 200 24 669 0 914 83.1 12 2 644 0 0 0 646 53.8 8 385 45 0 0 0 430 53.8 12 2063 2759 52 959 222 6055 504.6 12 1917 2599 168 894 49 5627 468.9 g plays
12 11 8 9 5 12 12
rush
pass
total avg/g
401 -49 2628 2579 282 1421 0 1421 77 385 0 385 58 201 0 201 25 76 66 142 896 2063 2759 4822 818 1917 2599 4516
214.9 129.2 48.1 22.3 28.4 401.8 376.3
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
SAN DIEGO STATE FOOTBALL STATS COMBINED TEAM STATISTICS (as of Dec 10, 2013) All games
RECORD: ALL GAMES CONFERENCE NON-CONFERENCE DATE Aug 31, 2013 Sep 07, 2013 Sep 21, 2013 Sep 28, 2013 *Oct 04, 2013 *Oct 10, 2013 *Oct 26, 2013 *Nov 02, 2013 *Nov 09, 2013 *Nov 16, 2013 *Nov 23, 2013 *Nov 30, 2013
OVERALL 7-5-0 6-2-0 1-3-0
HOME 3-3-0 3-1-0 0-2-0
OPPONENT EASTERN ILLINOIS at #3 Ohio State OREGON STATE at New Mexico State NEVADA at Air Force #15 FRESNO STATE NEW MEXICO at San Jose State at Hawai`i BOISE STATE at UNLV
TEAM STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty RUSHING YARDAGE Rushing Attempts Average Per Rush Average Per Game TDs Rushing PASSING YARDAGE Comp-Att-Int Average Per Pass Average Per Catch Average Per Game TDs Passing TOTAL OFFENSE Average Per Play Average Per Game KICK RETURNS: #-Yards PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards INT RETURNS: #-Yards FUMBLES-LOST PENALTIES-Yards PUNTS-AVG TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 3RD-DOWN Conversions 4TH-DOWN Conversions RUSHING MUEMA, Adam PUMPHREY, Donne YOUNG, Chad PRICE, Chase LOCKETT, Colin GARRETT, Dwayne MILLER, Mike HARDWICK, De’Sa JUDGE, Eric VIZZI, Tim BOESCH, Aaron RUFFIN, Ezell TEAM DINGWELL, Adam KAEHLER, Quinn Total Opponents
GP Att 12 228 12 123 12 18 9 15 11 2 12 8 2 2 1 1 12 1 12 1 1 1 12 5 9 8 2 8 11 46 12 467 12 429
W/L L L L W W OT W L OT W W W OT W OT L
AWAY 4-2-0 3-1-0 1-1-0 SCORE 19-40 7-42 30-34 26-16 51-44 27-20 8-35 35-30 34-30 28-21 34-31 19-45
SDSU 247 102 131 14 1917 467 4.1 159.8 25 3147 245-433-14 7.3 12.8 262.2 17 5064 5.6 422.0 53-1129 18-198 7-32 24-14 75-646 56-38.9 32:01 79/197 15/35
NEUTRAL 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 ATTEND 42978 104984 32133 16113 22475 17280 32707 35890 17932 28530 33161 15884 OPP 246 90 136 20 1595 429 3.7 132.9 20 3116 283-457-7 6.8 11.0 259.7 28 4711 5.3 392.6 33-750 12-95 14-103 15-9 74-574 66-41.1 27:59 72/184 10/22
Gain Loss Net Avg TD Long Avg/G 1074 59 1015 4.5 12 57 84.6 771 21 750 6.1 8 72 62.5 109 0 109 6.1 2 27 9.1 85 5 80 5.3 0 18 8.9 52 0 52 26.0 1 48 4.7 39 1 38 4.8 0 15 3.2 7 0 7 3.5 0 4 3.5 7 0 7 7.0 0 7 7.0 6 0 6 6.0 0 6 0.5 5 0 5 5.0 1 5 0.4 1 0 1 1.0 1 1 1.0 6 9 -3 -0.6 0 5 -0.2 0 13 -13 -1.6 0 0 -1.4 13 33 -20 -2.5 0 11 -10.0 71 188 -117 -2.5 0 16 -10.6 2246 329 1917 4.1 25 72 159.8 1882 287 1595 3.7 20 45 132.9
PASSING KAEHLER, Quinn DINGWELL, Adam RUFFIN, Ezell VIZZI, Tim PUMPHREY, Donne Total Opponents
G 11 2 12 12 12 12 12
RECEIVING RUFFIN, Ezell LOCKETT, Colin PUMPHREY, Donne DENSO, Dylan ROBERTS, Adam VIZZI, Tim MUEMA, Adam YOUNG, Chad JUDGE, Eric CRAIGHEAD, Robe CLARK, Larry GARRETT, Dwayne PRICE, Chase Total Opponents
Effic 135.72 64.28 0.00 377.20 0.00 124.12 136.36 G 12 11 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 7 12 9 12 12
Cmp-Att-Int Pct Yds TD 217-361-9 60.1 2796 17 27-68-5 39.7 318 0 0-2-0 0.0 0 0 1-1-0 100.0 33 0 0-1-0 0.0 0 0 245-433-14 56.6 3147 17 283-457-7 61.9 3116 28
No. 63 49 22 19 19 17 17 14 11 5 3 3 3 245 283
Yds 1061 696 234 240 206 271 94 66 173 32 51 18 5 3147 3116
Avg 16.8 14.2 10.6 12.6 10.8 15.9 5.5 4.7 15.7 6.4 17.0 6.0 1.7 12.8 11.0
Lng Avg/G 80 254.2 49 159.0 0 0.0 33 2.8 0 0.0 80 262.2 71 259.7
TD Long Avg/G 3 75 88.4 5 80 63.3 2 23 19.5 1 29 20.0 2 36 17.2 0 60 22.6 0 14 7.8 1 13 5.5 3 44 14.4 0 17 2.7 0 33 7.3 0 10 1.5 0 5 0.6 17 80 262.2 28 71 259.7
FIELD GOALS FGM-FGA Pct 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 Lg Blk FEER, Wes 8-11 72.7 0-0 2-2 3-5 3-4 0-0 45 1 MCMORROW, Seamu 0-4 0.0 0-0 0-0 0-3 0-1 0-0 0 2
|------ PATs ------| SCORING TD FGs Kick Rush Rcv Pass DXP Saf Points MUEMA, Adam 12 0-0 0-0 2-2 0 0-0 0 0 76 PUMPHREY, Donne 10 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 60 FEER, Wes 0 8-11 14-18 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 38 LOCKETT, Colin 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 36 VIZZI, Tim 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0 0 20 YOUNG, Chad 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18 RUFFIN, Ezell 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18 MCMORROW, Seamu 0 0-4 18-20 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18 JUDGE, Eric 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18 ROBERTS, Adam 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 DENSO, Dylan 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0 0 8 WHITTAKER, J.J. 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 BOESCH, Aaron 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 LAMAR, David 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 1 0 2 TEAM 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 1 2 KAEHLER, Quinn 0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 2-3 0 0 0 Total 45 8-15 32-38 2-3 2 2-3 1 1 338 Opponents 52 10-1446-50 0-1 0 0-1 0 0 388 SCORE BY QUARTERS San Diego State Opponents
DEFENSIVE LEADERS 20 BERHE, Nat 27 PINKINS, Eric 36 TENHAEFF, Nick 48 GAVERT, Josh 35 HOLDER, King Total.......... Opponents......
1st 68 104
GP 12 12 12 12 12 12 12
2nd 67 86
Solo 59 46 43 30 45 511 503
3rd 67 71
4th 116 117
OT 20 10
INTERCEPTIONS WHITTAKER, J.J. KAZEE, Damontae TENHAEFF, Nick GAVERT, Josh HARRIS, Vaness
No. 3 1 1 1 1
Yds 29 0 0 3 0
Avg 9.7 0.0 0.0 3.0 0.0
TD 1 0 0 0 0
PUNTING No. Yds Avg Long TB ALESI, Joel 52 2052 39.5 56 2 MCMORROW, Seamu 3 118 39.3 42 0 TEAM 1 7 7.0 7 0
FC 21 0 0
Long 18 0 0 3 0 I20 Blkd 17 1 2 0 0 0
PUNT RETURNS VIZZI, Tim TEAM Total Opponents
No. 16 2 18 12
Yds 199 -1 198 95
Avg 12.4 -0.5 11.0 7.9
TD 2 0 2 1
Long 71 0 71 60
KICK RETURNS LOCKETT, Colin VIZZI, Tim JUDGE, Eric PUMPHREY, Donne BEED, Everett YOUNG, Chad CLARK, Larry PORTER, Brandon Total Opponents
No. 30 7 5 4 3 2 1 1 53 33
Yds 740 114 113 63 57 21 15 6 1129 750
Avg 24.7 16.3 22.6 15.8 19.0 10.5 15.0 6.0 21.3 22.7
TD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Long 44 27 35 28 28 13 15 6 44 100
Rush 52 1015 -3 750 5 1917 1595
Rec 696 94 1061 234 271 3147 3116
ALL PURPOSE LOCKETT, Colin MUEMA, Adam RUFFIN, Ezell PUMPHREY, Donne VIZZI, Tim Total Opponents TOTAL OFFENSE KAEHLER, Quinn MUEMA, Adam PUMPHREY, Donne DINGWELL, Adam YOUNG, Chad Total Opponents
G 11 12 12 12 12 12 12
PR 0 0 0 0 199 198 95
KOR IR 740 0 0 0 0 0 63 0 114 0 1129 32 750 103
Tot Avg/G 1488 135.3 1109 92.4 1058 88.2 1047 87.2 589 49.1 6423 535.2 5659 471.6
G Plays Rush Pass Total 11 407 -117 2796 2679 12 228 1015 0 1015 12 124 750 0 750 2 76 -20 318 298 12 18 109 0 109 12 900 1917 3147 5064 12 886 1595 3116 4711
Avg/G 243.5 84.6 62.5 149.0 9.1 422.0 392.6
Total 338 388
|-------Tackles-------| |-Sacks-||---Pass Def---| |-Fumbles-| Ast Total TFL/Yds No-Yards Int-Yds BrUp QBH Rcv-Yds 35 94 5.0-23 1.0-3 . 6 . 2-0 22 68 7.0-18 1.0-10 . 4 . 2-13 21 64 13.0-54 5.0-37 1-0 1 . . 31 61 6.0-38 3.0-21 1-3 2 1 1-42 15 60 2.0-3 . . 8 . . 300 811 67-255 22-157 7-32 41 3 9-55 390 893 77.0-316 28-203 14-103 47 10 14-67
FF . 2 1 1 . 12 15
Blkd Kick . . . . . 3 7
Saf . . . . . 1 .
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
BOWL STAFF
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Proud to support Idaho agriculture and the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl
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2013 FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL
UB VS. SDSU | DECEMBER 21ST, 2013
THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS OF THE 2013 FAMOUS IDATO POTATO BOWL SPONSORS Advocare
Idaho Potato Commission
Potato Grower Magazine
Agri Beef
Idaho Statesman
Pinz/Wahooz
BCVB
Internet Truckstop
Penske Corporation
Boise Winnemucca
Idahoan
Simplot
Cable One
Interwest Systems
Stein Distributing Co.
Commercial Tire
Potandon Produce
Swire Coca Cola
Courtyard by Marriott
KTRV Fox 12
The Riverside Hotel
Cumulus Broadcasting LLC.
KTVB News Channel 7
Royal Purple
ESPN
LAMAR Outdoor Advertising
Taco Bell
Fast Lane Indoor Kart Racing
Larry H. Miller Auto Group
United Heritage
Holiday Inn Express
Metal Craft
Wells Fargo
Grove Hotel
Northwest Farm Credit Service
Wilson Harris & Co
Hotel 43
North by Northwest
Vonage
VOLUNTEERS AND KEY INDIVIDUALS Les Cullen
Amy Crookston
Joyce Popp
Joe DaRosa
Sam Hendrickson
Bob Rickets
Scott Hale
Ryan Becker
Jim Core
Travis Hiner
Gene Novotny
Tom Scott
John May
Joyce Novotny
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THE TRUE MAGIC oF agriculture
is freedom When food is abundant and you don't have to worry about your next meal, you're free to pursue your dreams. At Simplot we are passionate about creating healthier, easier-to-grow foods through cutting edge growing techniques like using GPS technology to analyze soil for more efficient water and nutrient delivery. It may be science, but it's nothing short of magical.
Find out more at simplot.com